Summaries of Death and the King’s Horseman and Streetcar Names Desire

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Soyinka and Williams present their main characters, Blanche and Elesin, as victims of their own delusions by showing how they do not live in reality, but in their own worlds and how they never listen to anyone else when given advice. These two characters seem unstable in one way or another and their endings are unhappy ones. There are also times where these characters are completely different and their lives juxtapose one another.
Blanche and Elesin are very similar as their delusions start off with both of them enjoying a good and expensive life. Both these characters relied on their lifestyle to get through life and fulfil their duties. In ‘Death and the King’s Horseman’ (DKH), Elesin has any woman he wishes and he decides to impregnate a woman already betrothed, to leave his mark on the world. One of the phrases that can be picked out is the “seeds of passage” which not only represents the fertility of Elesin’s new bride, but how when the king passes to the ancestral world, another child comes from the unborn world into the living world. Elesin believes in his mind that he will die a ‘hero’ for doing his duty of escorting the deceased king through to the ancestral world and that the child he will allow into the world will grow up to be like him, a ‘great person’. This delusion never fully happens; Elesin dies in a rotting cell, dishonourably, leaving his pregnant wife. “Forget the dead. Turn you mind only to the unborn.” This is important as it is believed if the baby doesn’t approve of the living world they can choose to die and go back to the other world, so the bride has to concentrate on the next generation. Soyinka was also told of the King, who died, and his horseman was supposed to carry out the suicide ritual but when t...

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...eir defeat, Elesin defeated by culture (the British district officer) and Blanche by Stanley raping her and her delusions being her reality. Yoruba cultures would see DKH as very contradictory and would probably not agree as they wouldn’t like to be portrayed like mad people who always commit suicide. They may also have a negative view on western culture in ASND as they may find the nature of the play unsuitable for audiences and only learn about this new culture in a negative way. British people may find DKH an un-relatable play considering how it is based in another completely different culture and may also not appreciate the view given of the British about other cultures. Also, for ASND, they may find this play difficult as it is a very relatable play in today’s society, but this may also influence their decisions for the future and for future decisions.

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