Sanity & Madness in A Streetcar Named Desire & Ma Rainey's Black Bottom

Lesson 10
icon/ela/white

ELA

Unit 10

10th Grade

Lesson 10 of 23

Objective


Analyze how Williams uses tension in the poker scene to further develop his characters and create social commentary. 

Readings and Materials


  • Play: A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams  — Scene 2, pages 46–49, 59–63, 65 to end

  • Painting: Poker Night (from a Streetcar Named Desire) by Thomas Hart Benton 

Fishtank Plus

Unlock features to optimize your prep time, plan engaging lessons, and monitor student progress.

A Note for Teachers


  • Big ideas in text: In Scene 3, the male sphere (the poker game) collides with the female sphere (Blanche and Stella). Use the picture of this scene as an artifact for close reading before actually close reading the written text. This will help to serve as a segue into the level of close reading students need to do with words.

Target Task


Writing Prompt

How does Williams use tension in the poker scene to further develop his characters and create social commentary?

Sample Response

Upgrade to Fishtank Plus to view Sample Response.

Key Thinking


Annotation Focus

What lines, words, and phrases reveal the conflicts that arise when men and women are in the same space?

Scaffolding Questions

Opening passage, pages 46–49:

  • How is Mitch in juxtaposition to the other male characters?
  • What do you notice about the syntax of the men?

Middle passage, 59–63:

  • How does Blanche describe herself? How does this feed into stereotypes about women?

Final passage, 65 to end:

  • How are Stella and Stanley described in the final scene?
  • What happens when they are together?

Discourse Questions

How are men represented in this scene? How are women represented in this scene?

What conflicts arise when they are in the same space? How are these conflicts resolved?

How does this scene relate to the concept of pursuing one’s own desires?

Homework


Read and annotate A Streetcar Named Desire, Scenes 4–7 by Lesson 11.

  • Scene 4: What are your impressions of Stella’s response to Stanley’s actions in Scene 3? 
  • Scene 5: Where in this chapter do we see examples of Blanche’s desires? 
  • Scene 6: In what ways does Blanche reveal her reality in this scene? In what ways does Blanche create fantasy in this scene?
  • Scene 7: In what ways does Stanley peel back the layers of Blanche’s fantasy state?

Enhanced Lesson Plan

Fishtank Plus Content

Bring your most engaging lessons to life with comprehensive instructional guidance, detailed pacing, supports to meet every student's needs, and resources to strengthen your lesson planning and delivery.

Standards


  • LO 1.3B — Analyze how the writer's use of stylistic elements contributes to a work of literature's effects and meaning.
  • RL.9-10.2 — Determine a theme or central idea of a text and analyze in detail its development over the course of the text, including how it emerges and is shaped and refined by specific details; provide an objective summary of the text.

Supporting Standards

LO 1.3A
LO 2.3A
LO 2.3B
LO 2.3C
LO 2.3D
LO 5.1A
LO 5.1B
RL.9-10.1
RL.9-10.3
RL.9-10.4
SL.9-10.1

Next

Compare and contrast Stella and Blanche’s perceptions of reality in relation to the violence of the poker night.

Lesson 11
icon/arrow/right/large

Lesson Map

A7CB09C2-D12F-4F55-80DB-37298FF0A765

Request a Demo

See all of the features of Fishtank in action and begin the conversation about adoption.

Learn more about Fishtank Learning School Adoption.

Contact Information

School Information

What courses are you interested in?

ELA

Math

Are you interested in onboarding professional learning for your teachers and instructional leaders?

Yes

No

Any other information you would like to provide about your school?

We Handle Materials So You Can Focus on Students

We Handle Materials So You Can Focus on Students

We've got you covered with rigorous, relevant, and adaptable ELA lesson plans for free