When we first see Blanche she says, “they told me to take a street-car named Desire, and transfer to one called Cemeteries, and ride six blocks and get off at—Elysian Fields!.” The streetcar ride symbolizes that Blanche is wishing for a new life. Blanche already denies the fact that she is broke, so she’s surprised that she will be living with her sister in ghetto. Later on, we see that all of Blanches’ belongings are in one suitcase. The case is mostly filled with old and expensive dresses, long “fox-pieces,” and rhinestone. We see from this chest that Blanche denies that she’s poor by carrying around want-to-be high class clothing. …show more content…
Blanche denies her purity. In scene seven, Stanley tells Stella that Blanche had worked at the Hotel Flamingo as a prostitute. We see from this that Blanche denied her past by lying to Mitch, saying that she had never been more than kissed by a man. We see that Blanche was lying when she said that she was taking a leave of absence from her high school career. Blanche actually had relations with a teenage boy. Obviously, Blanche is not pure and innocent. The way Blanche implies that she’s a virgin, talks softly, and wears white, are all ways that Blanche is denying her history as a