73 pages 2 hours read

Tennessee Williams

The Glass Menagerie

Fiction | Play | Adult | Published in 1945

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Activity

Use this activity to engage all types of learners, while requiring that they refer to and incorporate details from the text over the course of the activity.

“Create a Menagerie”

In this activity, students will write a short scene about a family of glass animals to present for comparison to the main characters in the play.

Imagine four or five glass animals living together and discussing a problem similar to one of the Wingfields’ problems. The catch is that, like in Laura’s menagerie, the animals don’t argue. How might they approach the issues facing Amanda, Laura, and Tom and come up with a different outcome?

  • Work in a small group of 3-5 classmates.
  • Select a problem the family of animals experiences that is parallel or similar in some way to a problem experienced by the Wingfields.
  • Write lines of dialogue to convey the problem and how the animals work together to solve it without arguing.
  • Perform the scene for the group.
  • After, explain the parallel problem from the play and what character traits or situations prevent the amicable airing and solving of the problem for Tom, Amanda, and Laura.
  • When groups are finished, discuss as a class: How does this exercise contribute to understanding the characters in the play and their relationships?

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