Some people cannot handle the reality of their life‚ so they come up with ways to avoid dealing with it. In the play‚ A Streetcar Named Desire‚ Blanche is haunted by her past. She is incapable of escaping the choices that she has made‚ pushing her to lie‚ and lead people away from her true personality. When Blanche’s idealism obscures the truth‚ she is pushed past her breaking point‚ unable to identify the line between reality and self-indulgent fiction. Blanche has expectations for everybody around
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A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee William Why do people want to live in a perfect world? Everyone wants to live in their own fantasy world because that is where all their dreams are able to come true. No one wants a world of grief and sorrow‚ since life should be lived to its fullest. So‚ when we are faced with agony‚ we must either make a choice between accepting it or hiding from it. In the play “A Streetcar Named Desire” by Tennessee Williams‚ the author mainly focuses on Blanche Dubois
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Appearance vs. Reality In the novels‚ The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger‚ and Little Women by Louisa May Alcott‚ the characters experience appearance vs. reality in many different ways. The most predominant ways would be‚ trying to be someone different‚ lies‚ and Protection. Both Holden Caulfield from The Catcher in the Rye‚ and the girls from Little Women‚ experience that things are not always as they first seem to be. Firstly‚ Holden Caulfield from The Catcher in the Rye‚ and Marmee
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In Tennessee William’s A Streetcar Named Desire‚ there is a constant battle between fantasy and reality. Blanche represents the desire to escape reality and her adversary‚ Stanley‚ represents the harsh reality of life. The battle between these two forces is revealed to the audience through the symbolic use of light and darkness in the play. Blanche is so traumatized and burdened by the reality of her life that her only way to cope is to retreat into a fantasy world. She comes to stay with her sister
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of alcohol in Tennessee Williams’s A Streetcar Named Desire he illustrated this subject as refreshment‚ maintaining fictional reality and leading one onto the part of self-destruction. Stella sees alcohol mostly for a positive escape and as refreshment and to make a gathering and conversation more socially acquainted. “Blanche you sit down let me pour the drinks” (Williams 7) On the other hand‚ there is Blanche who perceives alcohol only as an escape from reality into her own little fictional world
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1. Set after World War I‚ A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams reflects many of the social and cultural changes that occurred after the war. 2. Immediately the time of day (“first dark of an evening”) accentuates the background of socio-economic change as it symbolically represents the death of an old value system and the birth of a new set of social values. 3. The play takes place in the French Quarter of New Orleans which is immediately depicted as an impoverished yet cosmopolitan
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The story of Streetcar named Desire is a deeply musical where characters tend to expressed their mood or thoughts. The Polka music plays a big role in the play‚ both as mood setter and characterization. The Varsouviana polka is used by Tennessee Williams to highlight the themes of death. This music is specifically shown in Blanche as a character‚ meaning that when we hear the polka‚ we hear what is inside her mind. For example‚ when Blanche tells Mitch about Allan‚ his secret and his death. This
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Quote Analysis Literary Features “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!” (Scene 1‚ Page 6) Sexual desires are a common interest several people tend to have and Blanche Dubois significantly portray and represents the theme of sexual intimacy in A Street Car Named Desire as Tennessee Williams uses allegory‚ allusion‚ symbolism‚ and foreshadow in order to demonstrate how do Blanche’s “trip” through
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A Streetcar Named Desire Symbolism is an important literary device used to give the reader an understanding of a character. Tennessee Williams‚ with the use of symbolism‚ brings his character’s alive in his play‚ A Streetcar name desire. In the story the reader follows a young southern woman by the name of Blanche Dubois as she moves to New Orleans to live with her sister‚ Stella‚ and her brother-in-law‚ Stanley. From there the reader slowly sees the Blanche’s descent into madness as she begins
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I believe the primary theme of A Streetcar Named Desire is madness as the result of a disconnect between idealism and reality. The main character of the play‚ Blanche DuBois‚ refuses to face reality‚ keeping her past mistakes and losses hidden from those around her by hiding in the shadows of madness and deception. She wishes nothing more than to escape from who she is‚ avoiding the interrogation lamp of life at all costs to conceal her depressing past and frightening present. In doing so‚ she falls
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