In scene four of “ A Streetcar Named Desire” Blanche attempts to convince Stella that she can get out of her situation with Stanley, but Stella insists she is not in anything she wished to get out of. Stella makes it clear that she is happy about her relationship with Stanley through their sexual chemistry by saying “ But there are things that happen between a man and a woman in the dark”. Stella believes that there is nothing wrong and she can’t understand why Blanche is so frantic. Blanche tries to persuade Stella that her situation with Stanley is just desire by arguing, “ What you are talking about is brutal desire- just- Desire!- the name of that rattle-trap streetcar that bangs through the Quarter, up one old narrow street and down another…”…
A Streetcar named Desire is driven by the imagination of Blanche and the other nature. The handwriting in the amusement cloak from their loyalty by representation as if the events they way through didn’t occur or were not momentous. The consideration of mockery/fantasia vs. devotion seems to carry on the intention that these independence poverty to “sally” their earth. Escaping your fact and vigorous in a like globe will leaving you intricate to the stuff around you. In some suit, if you are muscular enough to restrain from the humor and illusions around you, you may termination up in the loyalty, inclination Mitch. Both Stella and Blanche found it flower in their liking to remain in a humor but if you abide in it too far-reaching it can take…
Streetcar named desire was a play set in the 20th century, 1951 written by Teneesse Williams. This extrct from scene 10 is significant section of the play as it depicts the most important part of the play with the implied rape on Blanche by Stanley. Williams uses dramatic techniques and symbols which illustrate Stanley's violent and aggressive behavoiurs, displaying him in negative light and as a villian and through the use of violence and animal imagery. Also allowing us to see Stanley as an angonist to the actions he persued on Blanche. Teneesse Williams also uses the settings and motifs such as insanity to protray Blanche as a victim.…
One might be led to believe that the constant transitions between various streetcars could possibly be symbolic for the unstableness that Blanche’s life provided for her. The main streetcar focused on in the play was named Desire, which furthers leads us to believe that this is referring to Blanche’s desire of genuine happiness. She represents a deeply embedded fixture, stuck in the past. She’s spent so much of her younger years, investing in temporary facets, until now that she is actually aging; Blanche wishes to appear younger than what she is. She is in great denial, wanting to reclaim and relive those miserable years of life that she could never get…
A Streetcar Named Desire written by Tennessee Williams is a play about a southern lady named Blanche from Mississippi visiting her sister Stella, who is married to Stanley and currently living in Elysian Fields, New Orleans. Blanche arrives in Elysian Fields, and throughout her entire stay with Stella and Stanley, there is tension and conflict occurring in Stella’s house. Even though Blanche and Stella were brought up in the South under wealthy conditions, the conflict is mainly caused by Blanche’s dislike of Stanley because, as a blue-collar worker, Stanley's status is lower than the DuBois’. In another aspect, Stanley’s conflict is caused by him being suspicious of Blanche since her arrival. Blanche explains to Stella that…
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…
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.…
How is the character of Blanche presented in Scenes 1 and 2 in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’?…
The Varsouiviana plays when the Mexican woman says, “Flores? Flores para los muertos?’ (148). In other words, she is saying “Flowers? Flowers for the dead?”. The woman causes Blanche to recall many disastrous events, including her husband’s death simultaneously. The Mexican woman is symbolized as one of many demons Blanche cannot ditch. Suddenly, the Polka fades. Mitch desires Blanche sexually, however Blanche wants him to marry her first. Mitch rejects her because she is “not clean enough to bring in the house…” (150). Blanche is enraged; his refusal results to her living in the internal world of…
For the years that the United States has appointed by having regular meetings they always end with having a conclusion if there the laws are the best decision that will help the United States to have rights and being fair to the citizen of the United States. That time has finally come due to the fact that the federal government of the United States is being supported with three equal branches which are the executive, the legislature, and the judiciary. They saw the circumstances which is by England’s official and decided to construct a different kind of government which the government could not overpower the people of the United States. Also, the U.S. Constitution had created a central government which has the power to enforce laws and not…
In this scene, the blue piano reflects the loneness and emotional desire of Stanley. Although Stanley is Stella*s husband, he still cannot get into some parts of world which only belongs to Stella and Blanche. In some way, Stanley unconsciously wants to search some little secrets of them and to know about what kind of impression Blanche thinks him. The music expresses the emotional movement of Stanley.…
The play A Streetcar Named Desire revolves around Blanche DuBois; therefore, the main theme of the drama concerns her directly. In Blanche is seen the tragedy of an individual caught between two worlds-the world of the past and the world of the present-unwilling to let go of the past and unable, because of her character, to come to any sort of terms with the present. The final result is her destruction. This process began long before her clash with Stanley Kowalski. It started with the death of her young husband, a weak and perverted boy who committed suicide when she taunted him with her disgust at the discovery of his perversion. In retrospect, she knows that he was the only man she had ever loved, and from this early catastrophe evolves her promiscuity. She is lonely and frightened, and she attempts to fight this condition with sex. Desire fills the emptiness when there is no love and desire blocks the inexorable movement of death, which has already wasted and decayed Blanche's ancestral home Belle Reve.…
Music has a key role in the play, as it does in other theatrical plays. Tennessee Williams used music to show a change in mood or action, especially with Blanche’s character. Blanche is shown to have many, sudden changes in mood and as they happen the music will suddenly change with her. An example of this is when all the guys were playing poker at Stanley’s and Stella’s house. She escapes from the loud room of rowdy men and turns on the radio to escape the ruckus. Another example is when Blanche hears polka music she suddenly becomes delusional and hears the gunshot from her husband's suicide. As she descends deeper into madness the music becomes more frequent. The music symbolising the changes in her mental…
Murders, rapes, robberies, assaults, burglaries, and theft are all put into the same category, crime. Any of these crimes can relate to deaths. Which is something no one wants. Kansas City's violent crime and murder rates are among the nations highest, and has been for many years. its embarrassing that Kansas City is lumped together with other cities that are notorious for their high crime rates, such as Detroit, St.Louis, Oakland, Memphis, Atlanta, and Cleveland. Kansas City's crime risk is more tun three times the national average. i guess it could be worse. we could be St.Louis, the nations number one city for crime.…
As a graduating senior of Cook High School, I have attended school for approximately 2,324 days; going off the phrase, “You learn something new everyday.” that would suggest that I would have learned 2,324 lessons from school alone. To only say that one of the 2,324 lessons shaped me more than the rest would be false. They all have shaped me and made me into the person that I am today. However, talking about all of the lessons that have shaped me is not logical, I will share a lesson that I learned from my seventh grade math teacher, Ms. Canfield.…