Saturday, May 5, 2012

3 Women 1 Goal - A Literary Device Comparison


The plays Heidi Chronicles,( HC), by Wendy Wasserstein, A Street Car Named Desire, (SCND), By Tennessee Williams and Hedda Gabler, (HG), by Henrik Ibsen  though set in different eras all  revolve around the trials and tribulations of their female protagonists, Blanche DuBois, Hedda Gabler, and Heidi Holland respectively. The central theme of the play essays these essentially independent women trying to find their way and discovering their individual identity within the confines of a society where the male dominates. Fantasy over reality, feminism, and power struggles are all key themes played out in different scenarios.

  While Hedda,  and Blanche draw upon metaphoric masks to often hide their free will and independence from a judging society and give the illusion of fitting in due to their Victorian and Southern American restrictions, (please see my earlier blog on masks ), this is contrasted by Heidi who is much less apologetic on her ambition and free will as she is a  coming of age baby boomer in a modern world with albeit present but lesser restrictions. This contrast is highlighted by outcome where Hedda, unable to come to terms with her life, tired of the illusion commits suicide as death means freedom and release.  On the other hand  Blanche  fears death ,whose delusional escapism world  leads her tragically to the asylum  when reality wins. On the other hand, Heidi  comes to peace with her lot and starts a new chapter where single at forty, adopts a child with forward thinking hope despite the grievances of her past.

 Both HG and SCND are set in short time frames with references to the past that has shaped them and their present fragile emotional states whereas the over twenty year time line of HC sets the theme of the changing role of women. Heidi is educated and intelligent trying to make it in a society dominated by men. This is shown in the chosen title which reveals the post world war 2 coming of age of women. Heidi from her naiveté as a school girl with political radicalism in the 1960’s,  militant feminism in the 1970’s to her betrayal and disillusion in the 1980’s where she evolves to a Columbia University  professor. Wassertein almost blames the women’s movement where women are seen as trivial and men as serious as Heidi finds her bearings in a changing world. In contrast Blanche and Hedda are more obvious victims.  The title where Hedda holds onto her maiden name symbolizes her independence as does the awe she exudes to the other characters while in SCND the title symbolizes her journey as an allegoric trajectory of her life to achieve her desires but in a ironic foreshadow of her suicide she takes another streetcar named cemeteries to Eysian fields ( Greek allusion  both which allude to the death of her soul. )

In setting;  SCND is confined to a tiny apartment with the street visible showing the metaphor of Blanche being unable to leave her real world problems as she resides as an intruder in a hostile confined environment. Similarly HG is set in a few rooms in a home which ironically she pretended she wanted as the perfect wife but in reality is not her sanctuary but her incarceration as she spends her time rearranging the furniture in her frustration. In contrast HC, moves through varies settings as the story and Heidi progresses in maturity.

The past is a defining theme as shown in the guns in HG which not mere toys but represent a happier care free symbol of her former life and ironically allow her to escape in death. The guns also represent her masculinity in a phallic symbol. The portrait of her father and the piano link her to her past and are shifted as they no longer belong in her new life. The curtains act as a motif to shut out the world and live out the darkness of her heart and in her play acting close the final act and grand finale of her suicide. Flowers that she rearranges also acts as a motif for Hedda’s death and future while the reference to a Mexican woman selling flowers for the dead  and Blanche’s  reaction of horror in scene 9  of SCND foreshadows Blanche’s figurative death.  Similarly, in SCND Blanche hides the loss of her youth and beauty from Mitch  in dim light as she shuns the present and lives in her former glory until forced by Mitch to stand under the light. This symbolizes her regressive nature to hold on to better times where she lived in high society with a husband she loved, before her loved ones died and her stately home is taken away. The motif of light such as the covering of the lamp with a lantern show the metaphor that light is her innocence and youth and dark her maturity and disillusion. In contrast Heidi lives far more for the present and future though she too haunted by ghosts of the past and tries to escape her mistakes by taking a job in Minnesota until persuaded otherwise by Peter as he looks at her past as symbolized by boxes of records and books. Light and dark do not appear as metaphors in HC.

Music plays prominence as a symbol in all three plays. In HG in the piano representing the music of happier times while in HC the music chronicles her life and the era and mirrors her feelings like “Respect “ playing in the background during the feminist meeting in the church. In SCND only Blanche can hear the Varsouviana polka which haunts her guilt at her husband’s suicide and her singing of “Paper Moon” drowns out Stanley’s vocal ranting of her unsavory character and adds to her delusion that her lies are believable.

All three plays show the protagonists dependence on men as a theme,  like a damsel in distress and the characterization of the men as foils add to this. Blanche desperately wants to marry Mitch for security and deludes herself on a rich savior of Shep Huntleigh to rescue her. Hedda has lost her lover Lovborg and is forced to rely on Tesman as a husband and caretaker  after her father General Gabler’s demise. Though Heidi is the most self reliant of the trio she still relies on the crumbs given out to her by Scoop, waiting for his calls and being defined by him only to be betrayed, and leans on the gay Peter for as an emotional crutch. Peter even remarks on the allusion of Peter and Heidi in the Swiss novel as the little girl lost, but the contrast is that ultimately Heidi rescues herself where Blanche and Hedda fail. All novels show the theme of women as sexual beings to be used by men like the womanizing Scoop. In HC women are described as meat and in SCND Stanley throws a piece of meat in scene 1 and in the end rapes Blanche. Hedda too is used sexually by the men in her life such as Lovborg, Tesman and the Judge who wants an extramarital affair with her. However, while Blanche and Hedda exploit their femininity and sexuality for manipulative purposes, Heidi is much less feminine in her approach relying on her personality than body.

The baby and  love and sexuality act  as a symbol in all three plays where it is positive in HC where the adoption represents a new beginning of pure love but in SCND Stella’s pregnancy reminds her of everything Blanche never had with her husband and the ticking biological clock as she desperately searches for a husband. More dramatically the pregnant Hedda hides and hates her pregnancy as it will simply further imprison her in a loveless marriage and her suicide ends this burden. Taking this further the manuscript is the metaphor for the ‘baby’ of Lovborg and Thea and her jealousy comes to a head as she burns it to destroy their happiness. The fire in fact foreshadows Hedda’s  death and contrasts her lack of passion and warmth towards others. Heidi and her group burn lingerie to rid themselves of sexual beings. The reference to vine leaves by Hedda  for Lovborg acts as the allusion of  Dioysus the Greek god of partying and fertility as she fantasizes about in the old alcoholic days where he would rebel from society taboos to be with her. In a situational irony she ends up encouraging Lovborg’s death despite her desire for him, with her gun having killed his ‘child’ the manuscript while rejecting domestic bliss with Tesman as symbolized with her careless attitude towards the slippers bought by his aunt. On the other in SCND the allusion to the Browning poem and the lighter represent Blanche’s lost love which has increased post her husband’s death. On the other hand despite Heidi’s love for Scoop she shies away from commitment despite her jealousy at his marriage and the recurring motif of art reveals her rebellion against traditional mating rituals as she fights for women representation in the art world.

The three plays are centrally the journey of three very different women tied by their desire to be free. The path to their self discovery, liberation and outcome may be varied but all three women show their solidarity in their convictions which they hold onto till the end.

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