the task is a hard one." Apply this statement to Streetcar. -Whereas Blanche comes from an old Southern family and was raised to see herself as socially elite‚ Stanley comes from an immigrant family and is a proud member of the working class. They meet one another in the socially turbulent postwar period in New Orleans‚ one of America’s most diverse cities. Blanche and Stanley are polar opposites in several respects. Blanche repeatedly refers to Stanley and his world as brutish‚ primitive‚ apelike
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Stanley. Blanche is the older sister of Stella‚ who was a high school English teacher in Laurel‚ Mississippi‚ before she was forced to leave her job. Around the age of thirty‚ Blanche is an already fragile woman who has come to live with her sister after losing Belle Reve‚ their family home. Blanche is a very sexual woman and has had many lovers in the past but puts on an act of a woman who has never known the indignity. It is thought that her promiscuity is why she lost her teaching job. Blanche avoids
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with the death of Blanche and Stella’s relationship as sisters. Blanche and Stella had a life together once in Bel Reve and when Stella decided to move on in her life and leave‚ Blanche never could forgive her. We can see this in the scene when Blanche first arrives in New Orleans and meets Stella at the bowling alley. Stella and Blanche sit down for a drink and we immediately see Blanche’s animosity towards Stella. Blanche blames Stella for abandoning her at Bel Reve‚ leaving Blanche to handle the division
Premium A Streetcar Named Desire Stanley Kowalski Stella Kowalski
Streetcar Named Desire When examining both William Shakespeare’s Othello as well as Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire‚ one can not help but notice the stunning array of characters; each with their own and distinct personal identities. From Blanche Dubois in Streetcar to the evil Iago in Othello‚ personalities run wild and please us all with their similarities‚ differences‚ and intertwining complexities. While many of the characters in these particular plays exhibit strong differences in their
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unconstrained within their fantasy when they dislike the way that reality appears to be for the. In “A Streetcar Named Desire‚” Tennessee Williams protagonist‚ Blanche Dubois finds herself to be in a situation of living in illusion instead of reality. Williams’s addresses the importance of individuals who attempt to live unconstrained‚ through Blanche. Through her elusion 0f reality‚ her fantasy meets the inconvenience of Stanley Kowalski‚ who poses as reality. Through the ups and downs of fantasy attempting
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contention between two main characters‚ Blanche and Stanley‚ Stella‚ not a protagonist‚ however‚ changed dramatically ideologically her opinions on Stanley and on the recognition of truth and illusion. A Streetcar Named Desire tells the tragety of Blanche when she fights for the “patriarchal” society‚ yet she cannot get rid of the dependence on men in such a society. While the main thread of the story is tightly about the strife between Stanley and Blanche‚ the character of Stella is gradually affected
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New Orleans industrial worker‚ Stan Kowalski‚ representing the new America and his aristocratic‚ intellectual rival‚ Blanche Dubois‚ representing the old. The dramatic effects of Streetcar are obvious in the settings
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looking at the protagonist of the play. Blanche Dubois is the protagonist and as the play develops we can begin to see that Stanley develops in to the antagonist. The two characters are the polar opposite of one another‚ Blanche is described as beautiful and moth like which allows us to see that she is very delicate and by the name ‘Blanche’ which means white we can see that she has a vulnerable and insecure nature‚ whereas Stanley is juxtaposed to Blanche‚ she wears white however Stanley wears ‘polka-dot
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on men to expose and critique the treatment of women during the transition from the old to the new South. Both Blanche and Stella see male companions as their only means to achieve happiness‚ and they depend on men for both their sustenance and their self-image. Blanche recognizes that Stella could be happier without her physically abusive husband‚ Stanley. Yet‚ the alternative Blanche proposes—contacting Shep Huntleigh for financial support—still involves complete dependence on men. When Stella
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The loss of traditional values can be seen at the beginning of the play by the portrayal of the fading Southern beauty‚ Blanche‚ in Laurel‚ Mississippi. Her home‚ Belle Reve‚ and family fortune were gone. It reveals that she is having a financial difficulty. Since she lost her young husband to suicide years earlier‚ she has a strong need for human affection. Later‚ she was fired from her job as an English teacher because she had an affair with a teenage student. Finally‚ she has no choice but to
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