The relationship between DuBois and Stanley Kowalski was already missing even despite the time that Stella Kowalski, DuBois’s…
In the commencement of the play, Blanche is quickly described as a damsel in distress. She is portrayed as a wealthy woman “in a white suit with a fluffy bodice, necklace and earing of pearl, white gloves and hat…” (5). She resembles an embellished white moth. The fact that she is forced to live with her younger sister Stella and her domineering husband truly shows that Blanche is in a truly desperate situation. Her overall character is depicted as a traumatized woman that is in complete desolation. Experiences such as witnessing her family on a “...Long parade to the graveyard” (21). Being forced to live with your family until their tragic demise would emotionally and mentally torment anyone. She lives inside of her own world in which she…
- Behind her veneer of social snobbery and sexual propriety, Blanche is an insecure, dislocated individual. She is an aging Southern belle who lives in a state of perpetual panic about her fading beauty. the Kowalski household, Blanche pretends to be a woman who has never known indignity. Her false propriety is not simply snobbery, however; it constitutes a calculated attempt to make herself appear attractive to new male suitors. Blanche depends on male…
1. Blanche who is homeless, comes to her sister’s house at the beginning. Blanche had been a schoolteacher, married Allan, a man she later discovered to be gay. Her reactions to his sexual orientation caused him to commit suicide. Lonely, she becomes a prostitute, who loses her teaching career when her sexual relationship with a teenager is found out. After the family plantation Belle Reve is lost, she turns to her little sister Stella, who lives in with her husband Stanley in a poor area of New Orleans. She is a very deluded character; She hides her past and fragility behind her Southern aristocrat clothes and manners and is very harsh and mean to Stanley, calling him “bestial” (71). When her past is revealed, she loses a guy named Mitch’s love and the possibility of getting married to him. At the end of the play, she is raped by Stanley (Stella’s husband), goes crazy, and is taken to the state mental asylum. Blanche is the main focus of the play. She is a complex character. “If a single character in contemporary American stage literature approaches the classical Aristotelian tragic figure, it must surely be Blanche DuBois. Deceptive, dishonest, fraudulent, permanently flawed, unable to face reality, Blanche is for all that thoroughly capable of commanding audience compassion, for her struggle and the crushing defeat she endures have the magnitude of tragedy. The inevitability of her doom, her refusal to back down in the face of it, and the essential humanity of the forces that drive her to it are the very heart of tragedy. No matter what evils she may have done, nor what villainies practiced, she is a human being trapped by the fates, making a human fight to escape and to survive with some shred of human dignity, in full recognition of her own fatal human weaknesses and the increasing…
In the play, she tells Blanche, "but there are things that happen between a man and a woman in the dark--that sort of make everything else seem-- unimportant(pg.72)". This quote from the play demonstrates how Stella and Stanley's relationship is all based around their sexual desires and that is why Stella has such a strong sexual attraction to Stanley. The title of the book, A Streetcar Named Desire, even brings the meaning of Stanley and Stella's relationship to another level because the word desire is in the title, so it sort of lets the reader predict the temptations in the books. The quote is significant because it displays how Stella thinks of Stanley and how he makes everything else seem unimportant, like he's magic, as Blanche would…
In A Streetcar Named Desire, the theme of violence is very frequent in the character Stanley Kowalski. Stanley is a married, young man, who comes across to the reader as quite an enraged person with animalistic attributes. A prime insinuation of Stanley’s difference to regular humans is when Stella DuBois (Stanley’s wife) explains to her sister that Stanley is of “a different species”, foreshadowing that Williams may be warning the reader that Stanley is capable of things that are not in the norm.…
Stanley and Stella are married and live in Elysian Fields. Stella was born into a wealthy family from Belle Reve and married Stanley, who is from the middle class. Stella depends on Stanley for love and to make her feel better. In reality, Stanley is a powerful man and can get any woman he wants. Stella “couldn’t believe her story and [she continues] on living with Stanley” (133). Blanche tries to inform her sister how Stanley is not the man she thinks he is, and how she is living in a fantasy. Stella chooses to believe Stanley, which demonstrates how she is living a lie. Stella does not agree with the accusations that were made. Stanley is abusive to Stella, yet she proceeds to say “I am not in anything that I have a desire to get out of” (65). Stella admits she does not want to leave Stanley even though she is continually…
The main characters in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ are Blanche, Stanley and Stella. Blanche is from old world America. She moves to New Orleans with her sister Stella and her husband Stanley after she goes through a bad time in her life and losses her job along with her family house. Blanche has power over her sister, and she abuses this power. This is first demonstrated when Blanche asks her sister to get her a drink from the drug store and she does so ‘Blanche- Honey, do me a favour. Run to the drug-store and get me a lemon-coke with plenty of chipped ice in it! – Will you do that for me, Sweetie?’ This demonstrates the power of fear which Stella feels. She believes that if she does not comply with her sisters ‘orders’ then she will have a more stressful and difficult life so she obeys.…
This was the case when Blanche told Stella that Stanley had raped her. Stella refused to believe her sister because, “I couldn’t believe her story and go on living with him” (Williams 1172). Due to her need to take care of herself and her child financially she wrote her sister off, with the power to determine both Blanche’s and Stanley’s fate. Blanche comes to see Stella in a vulnerable position. Stanley utilized some of his contacts and found out that Blanche, “for the last year or two she has been washed up like poison” (Williams 1157). He discovered that Blanche was not welcome to return to her hometown because she, “was kicked out of that high school, according to Stanley because, “a seventeen year old boy- she’d gotten mixed up with” (Williams 1157). Furthermore, Blanche arrives at Stella’s broke. In addition to losing her job as a teacher Blanche lost their families estate. Blanche told Stella, “you are the one that abandoned Belle Reve not I! I stayed and fought for it, bled for it, almost died for it (Williams 1123). Blanche does this in an attempt to blame Stella for the loss of the estate. However, after some prodding by Stella Blanche reveals despite these efforts she did, in fact, lose the Belle Reve (Williams 1123). These scenes reveal Stella’s power through socioeconomic status, ironic considering she lost a bit of socioeconomic status when…
People can change personalities depending on who they are around. Stanley and Blanche are strong characters in their own ways. Stanley is a man who fulfills his duties as a husband and a man to his wife Stella. Blanche is Stella's sister who is perceived as rich and sophisticated with many dark secrets. Blanches performance differs on whom is around her.…
Blanche Duboise reenters Stella’s life with expectations to be welcomed. She is quickly mistaken upon meeting Stanley. As a result of Stanley and Blanches differences, they did not share any form of a positive relationship. Because of this, Blanche does not approve of her way of living nor the man she is in love with. Blanche states with a superior attitude, “Well if you’ll forgive me- he’s common!” (82). Stella, insulted by her sister, is left unsure of whom to side with. This unapproved notion of Stanley, adds to the sympathy towards Stella as she is not receiving the respect and trust of judgment from Blanche. As a victim of verbal abuse, the empathy for Stella is caused by Blanche’s actions.…
Stanley Kowalski struggles to cope with Stella's background as she seems to appear somehow “superior” to him because of her past and where she comes from. He believes he has finally managed to bring Stella into his world when Blanche storms into their lives and tries to win Stella over. This initiates a tug of war between Stanley and Blanche.…
In the play, A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams, Blanche and Stanley are well-known, as opposite characters with symbols of conflicting deals, but these two characters also have many similarities with each other. For example, Stanley and Blanche both have a well-built desire for love. Stanley, has no need to seek for love because he yearns, his marriage life with his wife Stella. Blanche, on the other hand, is seeking for respect and love for a new husband, since she lost her last husband. Also, Stanley and Stella are a couple that appears to be loving and compassionate with each other, until Blanche comes for a visit to New Orleans to live with the couple. With conflicting issues dealing with Blanche and Stanley, it causes an unhealthy, abusive problems with Stella and Stanley’s marriage.…
1. Continuing from Module 5 Homework Assignment, take out your outline and reread your topic and effects.…
Atheism, meaning 'a belief without God' is a belief that is becoming increasingly popular in the Western society. Essentially, some atheists claim to be anti-religion and reject religious dogmas; however, I should first establish that there are two different types of atheists. The first is known as positive atheism where the individual not only refute the arguments for the existence of God but also goes a step further to develop arguments. The second type also known as negative atheism does not consider the existence of god and does not feel that the arguments for the existence of God are not sufficient enough to spark a belief. For the purpose of this essay, I will mostly argue from and against a positive atheist’s perspective that not only consciously refuses to believe in a God but also chooses to develop arguments. A philosophical consideration that can be raised from the question is if Atheism has the belief that there is no God then surely it can still be classed as a religion?…