| dc.description.abstract | The play Summer and Smoke is originally written to tell the romance 
between two main characters, they are Dr. John Buchanan, Jr. and Alma 
Winemiller. Nevertheless, it becomes an even more interesting story of romance 
when we give proportionally attention to the other female characters who are 
involved in the same story; each of the characters in the analysis of this thesis is 
having the same objective that is winning the love of Dr. John. Alma Winemiller, 
John Buchanan, Rosa Gonzales, and Nellie Ewell perform the same attitude to 
win the heart of the person they love. Such attitude involves tricks, strategies to 
put the person they love in a situation that is hard to escape; a situation that causes 
him or her to reveal secrets, betrays his or her own ideas, etc. which has been 
properly termed “love traps”. Each of the four characters analyzed in this thesis 
performs the love traps subjective to their own experience also to their personal 
and social backgrounds. 
 The love story of Alma, as it is told ironically by Tennessee Williams, has 
started very early. She is presented as a girl of ten who has already had the feeling 
of love for the little John. Her love remains in her heart when she reaches her 
teenage toward her adulthood. It stays there as faithfully as Alma does in Glorious 
Hill waiting for her lover to come and brings her the miracle. That same feeling 
endures the steaming heat of summer in Glorious Hill, Mississippi. In the end of 
the play, Alma has lost John’s love because her great appreciations on piety, 
morality, pride of a lady, and profound way of thinking rejecting notions of the 
physical oppose John’s. John’s way of thinking represents the physical where 
empirical facts are more important. Alma’s soulful love is against John’s because 
John sees that love is just a matter of the twinning of two bodies. 
 John also fails in bringing Alma into his possession because of the irony 
Williams created. John finds the sensuality in Alma while she guides him to his 
recognition. His chance for matching Alma’s projection of a “gentleman” arrives 
in just about the time that Alma sets different standard that is by the time the 
“lady” has died and, concurrently, the idea about being “a gentleman” no longer 
  
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has relevance. Both cannot be together because of their exchanging position 
nicely presented in the play with the heaviest emphasis before the closing of the 
play. John gets closer to Alma but never so close for her to hold. 
  Alma’s love story becomes even more ironic when we add to it the other 
female characters. The sexy Rosa’s approaches to get her love also fail because 
John eventually desires more than just physical satisfaction despite his monstrous 
appetite for biological needs. Rosa who is relying only on her body cannot get 
sincere love from John. His father could not do better than pushing with his 
money and revolver that end up in the tragedy of Dr. Buchanan’s death because of 
which John sets out for finding his true identity. John departs to Lyon to finish his 
father’s duty and comes back with sudden glory and new-found responsibility. 
 Finally, Nellie’s unexpected winning in becoming Mrs. John serves small 
amount of contribution for the conclusion of the play. So mysteriously does the 
play conclude that it leaves us not a thing but another question instead of the 
closed plot of the play. Nellie’s lines are quite short despite of her minor role in 
the play. These do not contribute many convincing suppositions in deciding 
whether it is her love traps that give her victory. Therefore, there are not enough 
evidence that we can use to reveal such mysterious end but that Williams tries to 
expose Alma’s bitter irony in commencing her love. | en_US |