Streetcar Named Desire is a play that depicts the tragedy of Blanche Dubois‚ a daughter of the wealthy landowner in the South. As a result of the fall of the family‚ her life starts to collapse by struggling between ideal and reality. Having experinenced the terrible reality; her husband’s homosexuality and suicide‚ Blanche feels the distance between her dream life and her relentless reality‚ but she becomes more obseessed with the past‚ and doesn’t aceept the reality For me‚ Blanche Dubois was
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Based on my reading thus far‚ Blanche proves the most antagonistic characteristic. She is sister of Stella and came to meet her unexpectedly. She lost her husband few years earlier and she is a social pariah due to her indiscrete sexual behavior. She also seeks for people attention and wants them to complement her. She has bad drinking habit which she tries to hide from everyone. Blanche’s flirtatious behavior causes a lot of problems in Stella and Stanley life. Blanche displayed cunning‚ manipulative
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Williams focus on what it means to be both powerful and powerless in a variety of contexts. Discuss their exploration of these ideas with reference to both male and females. I will be comparing and contrasting Tennessee Williams play of 1947 ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ with Ian McEwen’ novel ‘Enduring Love’ of 1997. I aim to focus on the theme of power as presented by both authors. The first‚ a play‚ explores how power shifts between men and women such as the way that Blanche’s character loses the power
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“The Yellow Wallpaper” and Tennessee Williams’s “A Streetcar Named Desire” were published in different centuries‚ it reveals that the worrisome treatment of women have been prevalent throughout the history of American culture and society. While “The Yellow Wallpaper” mainly deals with the mistreatment of women by their husbands in the 19th century and how confined their lives were while the men had full control and respect‚ “A Streetcar Named Desire” illustrates that even though times have changed
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Williams and William Faulkner show‚ in their works‚ that sometimes the people with the greatest differences are the most insightful. This proves that the main characters of A Streetcar Named Desire and As I Lay Dying are very similar because they both experience tragedy and are affected by such. In the play A Streetcar Named Desire‚ by Tennessee Williams‚ one of the main characters‚
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"A Streetcar Named Desire works as a drama because of the conflicts between Stanley and Blanche." Discuss. The themes of A streetcar Named Desire are mainly built on conflict‚ the conflicts between men and women‚ the conflicts of race‚ class and attitude to life‚ and these are especially embodied in Stanley and Blanche. Even in Blanche’s own mind there are conflicts of truth and lies‚ reality and illusion‚ and by the end of the play‚ most of these conflicts have been resolved. At the beginning
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Williams also reinforces his implied themes with many motifs and symbols‚ such as music‚ drunkenness‚ and bathing. Towards the end of scene three‚ Blanche turns on the radio and “waltzes to the music with romantic gestures [while Mitch imitates] like a dancing bear” (57). Because Blanche is accustomed to her insanity‚ which is represented by the Varsouviana Polka‚ she is able to move along with the music fine while Mitch‚ who is accustomed to reality (and has primitive traits)‚ is unable to gracefully
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Fantasy vs. Reality Blanche is sufficiently self-aware to know that she cannot survive in the world as it is. Reality is too harsh‚ so she must somehow create illusions that will allow her to maintain her delicate‚ fragile hold on life. “A woman’s charm is fifty percent illusion” (scene 2) she acknowledges to Stanley. Later in the story line when Mitch wants to switch the light on so that he can get a realistic look at her‚ she tells him that she does not want realism‚ she wants magic. When Mitch
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the family mansion‚ to pay for the many funeral expenses. She finds herself living at the second-rate Flamingo Hotel. <br> <br>In an effort to escape the misery of her life in Laurel‚ Blanche drinks heavily and has meaningless affairs. She needs alcohol to stop the polka music‚ symbolic of Allan’s death‚ from running on in her head and to avoid the truth of her life. She surrenders her body to various strangers in an attempt to lose herself. She seduces young boys in memory of Allan. But her empty
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"A Streetcar Named Desire" by Tennessee Williams contains many different types of conflict. The most major type of conflict in "A Streetcar Named Desire" is social class conflict between the main characters. Also conflict with the main characters environment. One of the main characters Blanche Dubois suffers from a great degree of emotional and inner conflict. A recurring theme found is a constant conflict between reality and fantasy. Another important example of conflict in "A Streetcar Named
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