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The Glass Menagerie

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The Glass Menagerie
Maria Ottinger
Everest College
AML 2000
Mr. Neil
09/10/2014

The Glass Menagerie I think that what happened in the play after the last seen with Amanda and Laura blowing out the candle, after Tom had left them is positive. I think that the interaction that Laura had with Jim was very positive. It was a collection of conversation and interactions that addressed her biggest fears. Starting with the fact that the friend that Tom brings home, just happens to be the one boy that Amanda has ever had an interest in. Someone who meant a lot to her, so much that all these years later, she still keeps the program from the play he was in, tucked safely in her yearbook, that she keeps close by. The interaction with him, although at first is too much for her deal with at first, as apparent with her fainting, is the best thing that has ever happened to her. As the conversation between them goes on, he addresses her disappointment in not finishing school, and he then confesses that he wished he could be further along in his career. He goes on through the entire scene address each of her so called flaws and turning them into no big deal, hardly noticeable things, instead of the huge stumbling blocks she feels them to be. I think this helps her to see that everyone is not always as perfect and put together as she makes them out to be. I think this boost in self-confidence may have been all she needed to try to get out there and try to return to school or work. Sometimes one only needs someone to believe in them to move forward, and since her mother, was not very encouraging, Jim seem to be the ray of light in her life that she needed. The one symbol that I chose was the unicorn glass piece. She said it was her favorite, and it seemed to represent her and the world, a fantasy where she lived. When presented to Jim to hold he could not even

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