Reader Response- “Streetcar Named Desire” Stella Kowalski is one of the main characters in the Tennessee William’s‚ “ A Streetcar Named Desire”. She is presented as a woman who has an older sister Blanch and a husband named Stanley. She is often overlooked in the play because of her husband Stanley and her sister Blanche are much more dynamic. However‚ Stella plays an important role that without her‚ Stanley and Blanche who are considered‚ as two major characters of the play throughout the story
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2. “Plays often feature at least one ghost‚ either on stage or imagined in the form of haunting memories and burdens.” Discuss this statement with reference to Streetcar. (Nov 2010 HL) In the tragedy “Streetcar Named Desire” the author Tennessee Williams brings out a ghost on stage through the haunting memories of Blanche’s past. The Flaws in Blanche which are revealed to the audience by Stanley are rather shocking. It is revealed that Blanche began to take part in cheap forms of entertainment
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Stella was outside‚ so Stanley started questioning Blanche. She insisted that she had nothing to hide from him and let him go through all historical papers from Belle Reve‚ the plantation. While living with Stella and Stanley‚ Blanche had met a man named Mitch‚ who she started dating. She liked him a lot but she hid many things from him. Firstly‚ she hid secrets of her first lover‚ her husband Allan Grey. Every time she thought of him‚ she thought of how he killed himself and she heard the polka which
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To what extent do the Kowalskis and the DuBois represent a clash of cultures in “A Streetcar Named Desire”? “I am not a Polack. People from Poland are Poles‚ not Polacks. But what I am is a one hundred per cent American‚ born and raised in the greatest country on earth and proud as hell of it‚ so don’t ever call me a Polack.” - Stanley Kowalski In “A Streetcar Named Desire” the clash of cultures between Stanley Kowalski and the two DuBois sisters‚ Stella and Blanche‚ becomes
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In the play A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams‚ we are introduced to a slew of characters and different personas. The introduction sets the tone of the main characters‚ especially Stella Kowalski. Stella Kowalski is portrayed as a lighthearted‚ kind‚ younger sister of Blanche DuBois. Stella speaks freely with her neighbors‚ jokes around with her husband‚ and greets her sister with wide open arms. Then we are met with Stella’s foil character‚ Blanche‚ a teacher from Mississippi who seems
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Streetcar Film Essay The playwright for “A Streetcar Named Desire” is one that many‚ including myself‚ believe is a shocking or edgy piece of work. In 1951 under the “Hayes Code”‚ it is reasonable to ask whether these set of rules “handcuff” the filmmakers during that time‚ in making A Streetcar Named Desire film. Considering the edgy source material‚ one could worry whether the themes and characters would be diluted in an attempt comprise towards the code. In my opinion this is thankfully not
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Critique of the movie A Streetcar Named Desire’ A Streetcar Named Desire (1951) was a play by Tennessee Williams who also wrote the play The Glass Menagerie. It was a film of anger‚ loneliness‚ and shame. Every actor in the film made his or her own brilliant performance. The director was Elia Kazan who also directed movies like On the Waterfront‚ Splendor in the Grass‚ and East of Eden. The film stared Vivien Leigh as Blanche DuBois‚ Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski‚ Kim Hunter as Stella Kowalski
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The Amazing Dichotomies of "A Streetcar Named Desire" Light and dark‚ kindness and cruelty‚ realism and fantasy‚ all of them dichotomies used by Tennessee Williams in A Streetcar Named Desire. Tennessee Williams uses many dichotomies‚ clear cut divisions‚ to illustrate main points. The most prominent dichotomy is the sweet and fragile Blanche opposed to the cruel and savage Stanley. The play also highlights other dichotomies such as strong and delicate‚ hidden and open‚ and purity and filth. Basically
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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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“The broken” - A Streetcar Named Desire – Blanche DeBouis One of Tennessee William’s greatest successes is A Streetcar Named Desire which takes place in 1947‚ in New Orleans. The history and culture of the setting express the fundamental concerns of the text therefore the scene indicates the reversals that were happening during the World War II. Moreover‚ the French Quarter of New Orleans was responsible for the abundant background and for the sensitive events of the play (streetcars‚ bars‚ entertainment
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