The Awakening And A Streetcar Named Desire Comparison Essay

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Comparing the two characters from the novel The Awakening and the play A Streetcar Named Desire, Edna Pontellier and Blanche Dubois, there are clearly inherent differences between the two. Some differences being: Edna being an artist and Blanche being a teacher, Edna having two children and Blanche having none, Edna being a married women and Blanche being a widow. But, despite the differences the between the two characters there are also many similarities. The three most important similarities between the two characters are: both women are free spirited characters that give life to the novels they star in, they both have best friends that do not really understand them, and they both meet tragic ends at the end of their respective stories caused by men. Edna and Blanche are two characters that are very free spirited and youthful. They are spirits that are not to be tamed and do what they please regardless of what people think about them. Edna’s example of her most free …show more content…
The people who misunderstand them the most are their closet friends. In The Awakening, Edna’s best friend is Adele Ratignolle. Adele is a very traditional married creole woman who devoted to her husband and her children while Edna is not a mother woman and does not love her husband as much as Adele loves her. As family oriented as Adele is, it is hard for her to understand how Edna is able disregard her families needs as much as she does. Blanche, on the other hand, her closest friend in the play is her sister Stella. Her sister is aware that Stella is someone who is a mentally and emotionally unstable, something Blanche spends a good portion of the play trying to hide, and as an older sister she worries about her younger sister. But, even then she does not truly understand Blanche because of how much of a jumbled mess her life is after her husband commits

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