“I saw! I know! You disgust me…”: Manifestation of Homophobia and Patriarchal Oppression in Tennessee Williams’s Play, A Streetcar Named Desire
Journal: International Journal of English, Literature and Social Science (Vol.9, No. 1)Publication Date: 2024-01-05
Authors : Ananya Mandal;
Page : 301-304
Keywords : Heteronormative; Hetero-patriarchal; Homophobia; LGBTQ; Sexuality;
Abstract
A Western heteronormative society hints at its homophobia in diverse manners, but one of the most ubiquitous internalized notions is that of disgust and rejection. This sort of biased sexism fuels the gradual accretion of suicidal rates among LGBTQ youths. Generating homophobic discourses is one of the ways through which a hetero-patriarchal society demonstrates and maintains its power and oppression against sexual minorities and gender subalterns. Hetero-gender-based violence against women and homosexuals is also not uncommon in any society. The present paper aims to explore the manifestations of homophobia and hetero-patriarchal oppression against homosexuals and women in Tennessee William's play, A Streetcar Named Desire. By delving into the principles of Gender Studies and Queer theories, this paper seeks to investigate the role of compulsory heterosexual and patriarchal norms in the lives of Allan, Blanche, and Stella in victimizing and silencing them violently.
Other Latest Articles
- An Insight into the Mental Affliction of a Woman from a Downtrodden Society with reference to Bama’s Karukku
- Study the effect of Industrial Dairy, Textile, Leather and Paper Waste Water on the Engineering and Geotechnical Properties of Fine-Grained Soil
- Effect of Replacement Layers on Bearing Capacity of Silty Clay Layer
- A New Wedge-Shape Dental Implants for Narrow Bone Ridge: REX Piezoimplant, a Case Report With 12 Months of Follow-Up |Biomedgrid
- Green synthesis of iron-organic framework Fe-BTC using direct ultrasound to remove methylene blue dye
Last modified: 2024-03-02 13:40:36