Character

Hey guys, here is my initial break-down of character for Blanche, Stella, Stanley, and Mitch. I’m far from sure about a lot of these categories, so feel free to make changes. Also, I didn’t find many summary adjectives for Stella, so add more if you notice them!

Blanche:

Desire: To feel safe, secure, and attractive

Will: Strong

Moral Stance: A lady's job is to entertain gentlemen

Decorum: older than she wants to admit; gaudy/over-the-top outfits; overly concerned with appearance

Summary Adjectives: intense, on the verge of lunacy, nervous, hysterical, attractive, lovely, hot, frazzled, fresh, adaptable, excitable, soft, morbid, sensitive, proper, alone, old-fashioned, anxious, solemn, nice, unlucky, deluded, cultivated, destitute, desperate, caught, wonderful, not respected, famous, refined, particular, flighty, refreshed, rested, tender, trusting, hoity-toity, empty, unfit

Stella:

Desire: To be with Stanley

Will: Strong

Moral Stance: The relationship between a husband and wife is the most important

Decorum: pregnant, a little shabby according to Blanche

Summary Adjectives: dainty, precious, insane, good

Stanley:

Desire: To be the head of his own home

Will: Strong

Moral Stance: Napoleonic code; Friends tell friends the truth

Decorum: Military decorations, athletic

Summary Adjectives: unrefined, simple, straightforward, honest, primitive, animal, ape-like, whelp, lamb, stinker, bestial, common, forceful, dynamic, rude, American, cruel, fantastic, lucky

Mitch:

Desire: To not be alone

Will: Medium

Moral Stance: People in close relationships need to be "straight" with each other

Decorum: 6'1" and 207 pounds, working clothes, perspires a lot

Themes

Here is a starting point for themes. Feel free to add to any of this or change it up. It’s clearly not a complete description of the themes, but it’s something to work with.

Comparison to themes of the author's other works:

Fate- Oedipus and his family cannot escape their fate, no matter how they try to avoid it.

Comparison of themes by other authors of the time period:

Gods are supreme- Both Antigone and Medea illustrate that mortals cannot defy laws or promises set down by the gods and avoid punishment

Family- Even though Kreon initially considers family connections secondary to upholding his laws, he, like Jason in Medea, is devastated when his stance precipitates the death of his wife and child

Sanctity of marriage- In both Antigone and Medea, much of the violence stems not only from a breach of justice but also from the defiling of a marriage. In Medea’s case, it is one that is already well established, but in Antigone’s, it is one that was intended.

Comparison of themes of plays with similar actions:

King Lear- Similar to the way in which Kreon punishes Antigone for disobeying his orders, Lear rejects his daughter, Cordelia, for not telling him what he wants to hear.

Antigone Quotes- Thought

·         "We must keep in mind that first, we're born as women, we're not brought into being to war with men; and second, that we are ruled by those whose strength is greater, and we must yield to this"

·         "It makes no sense to do things that are futile"

·         "For me it's noble to do this thing, then die€¦ I will commit a holy crime, for I must please those down below for a longer time than those up here, since there I'll lie forever"

·         "To defy the citizens is beyond what I can do"

·         "Zeus utterly hates the noise of an arrogant bragging tongue"

·         "Any man who feels that someone close to him is more important than his own fatherland – him I count as belonging nowhere"

·         "Knowing that this ship keeps us safe, and only when it sails upright can we choose friends for ourselves"

·         "No one's such a fool as to be in love with dying"

·         "Often, hope for profit has destroyed men utterly"

·         "No one loves a messenger who brings with him bad news"

·         "For nothing current grows among us worse for men than silver: money ravages the cities, it forces men to leave their homes, it teaches mortals to turn to shameful deeds, it shows men how to commit all crimes, and know all kinds of irreverence"

·         "Dirty profits make for suffering"

·         "At many things – wonders, terrors – we feel awe, but at nothing more than at man"

·         "Honoring the laws of the earth and the justice of the gods, to which men swear, he stands high in his city. But outside any city is he who dares to consort with what is wrong"

·         "Mortals should not swear anything's impossible! – since later thoughts can prove one's judgment quite mistaken"

·         "To flee bad things yourself feels good, but it is painful to lead one of your own to something bad"

·         "Nor did I think your proclamation so strong that you, a mortal, could overrule the laws of the gods, that are unwritten and unfailing."

·         "For does not someone who, like me, lives on among so many evils, profit by dying?"

·         "And now if you think my actions happen to be foolish, that's close enough to being charged as foolish by a fool"

·         "Rigid walls are those most apt to fall, and that the hardest iron, forged in fire for greatest strength, you'll see is often broken, shattered"

·         "Grand ideas are not allowed in someone who's the slave of others"

·         "The mind of those who plan in the dark what is not right will often find itself caught as a thief"

·         "One-man rule brings with it many blessings – especially that it cand do and say whatever it wants"

·         "The good should not get equal honor with the evil"

·         "I don't like a loved one who only loves with words"

·         "Good sense that is innate in people deserts them in the midst of troubles"

·         "Among those whose house the gods shake, no ruin is absent as it creeps over a multitude of generations€¦"

·         "Zeus, what transgression of men could overcome your power? Neither sleep that catches everyone in its nets nor the weariless passing of the months named for gods can overcome it€¦"

·         "It is wide-wandering hope that brings benefit to many men, but it deceives many others with desires light as air"

·         "This is why men pray to bring up dutiful offspring and to keep them at home: so they'll pay back a hated foe with trouble, and giving honor, love the friends of their father as he does. Of him who breeds useless children, what else can you say but that he only begest more burdens for himself, and more mockery among his enemies?"

·         "An evil wife in bed with you at home is something that soon enough grows cold wrapped in your arms"

·         "He who is a good man in his own house will also be seen to be just in public life"

·         "Whoever is put into power by the city must be obeyed in everything – in small things, and what's just, and the opposite. There is no greater evil that lack of rule"

·         "We must safeguard the orders of the rulers, and we must never be defeated by a woman – better to be overthrown, if we must be, by a man; then we will not be said to have been beaten by the women"

·         "Whoever thinks that only he himself owns all good sense, that he and no one else has such a tongue and mind – when men like that are opened up, it's seen that they are empty"

·         "The trees that bend with the current save themselves and even their twigs, but those that stand straight are annihilated, root and branch"

·         "There is no city that belongs to only one man"

·         "It's best by far if a man is completely filled with knowledge by his nature€¦ It's also good to learn from what's well said"

·         "Do not look at my age, but at what I do"

·         "You show no reverence trampling on the honors the gods deserve!"

·         "She'll learn at last what pointless waste of effort it is to worship what is down below with Hades"

·         "For a woman who has died it is a great thing even to be spoken of as having the same fate as those who are like gods, both when alive and then afterward, when dead"

·         "To show reverence is indeed some reverence. But power, in him who holds power, is absolutely not to be opposed"

·         "The power of fate – whatever that is – fills us with terror and awe. Neither wealth nor weapons nor high walls nor dark sea-battered ships can escape it"

·         "Making bad choices is something shared by all men, but when a man goes wrong, he's not still ill-advised and not ill-situated if he tries to rectify the evil he has fallen into and stops insisting that he will not move. Stubbornness will earn the charge of botching things!"

·         "No man has the power to stain the gods"

·         "Wrong thinking is the worst"

·         "It's terrible to give way. But to resist – and strike my soul with ruin – is terrible"

·         "The gods' swift-footed bringers-of-harm cut down the evil-minded"

·         "One cannot fight against necessity"

·         "Fortune puts right and fortune topples down, always, the fortunate and unfortunate"

·         "When a man's enjoyment betrays him, I don't think of him as living but as a dead man who can still draw breath"

·         "Always, the truth is the right thing"

·         "Too much silence can €¦ point to what weighs heavy"

·         "The burden of being mortal – the sad, exhausting burden"

·         "Don't pray for anything – for from whatever good or ill is destined for mortals, there's no deliverance"

·         "Good sense is the first principle of happiness. We must not act disrespectfully toward the gods. Grand words of arrogant men, paid back with great blows, in old age teach good sense"

Here's an update to what I posted previously. Again, add anything that you think fits in and we can cut out the extraneous stuff later.