Hedda Gabler, A Streetcar Named Desire and The
Heidi Chronicles all have significant literary devices that are employed to
develop theme. Setting is an important literary devices that the authors focus
on.
Setting in The Heidi Chronicles
Shows how the social expectation of women doesn't change. Still expected
to be either a working woman or a housewife, and those who focus on a career
are criticized by others for not ‘fulfilling’ the role of women at the time
period. Also there is the idea of desperation, as women cannot actively pursue
men they are interested in as it is considered an act of desperation which the
women feel as though is an extremely negative quality. Within the setting Heidi
often is removed from the others in the scene.
In summary Wasserstein uses setting to show how the role of women did
not change dramatically despite a change in time period and location.
The change in time period is also significant because the characters
that once believed in feminist ideals are now no longer important to them. They
have been changed with the times.
The fact that the setting always returns to the university after scenes,
displays the notion of a lack of change. Time goes on but it seems as though
everything is still stuck in one place.
Setting in Hedda Gabler
The time period marks the women’s movement in Norway. It was a Patriarchal
society at the time. The background of the play plays a big role in
understanding the social differences between aristocracy and the rest. The
action itself is mostly set in the drawing room, acting as a gilded cage for
Hedda. The Ssde room is Hedda’s sanctuary with her father’s portrait, her guns,
etc. Hedda closes the
curtains often, masking herself from the rest of the world. She changes the
scenery, moves the objects out of the room and so everything’s changing.
Setting in A Streetcar Named Desire
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New Orleans 1950’s. The Southern United States
during this time treated women much differently from different eras, as seen by
the actions of Heidi and Hedda.
The setting in the Streetcar is New Orleans LA after WII. The setting
influences the characters, the values, and the music that you hear in the play.
In the Blanche is no longer on a plantation she is in the city so she is
learning the reality of being a modern woman in an urban setting. This is the
trend that America was heading to.