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    A Streetcar Named Desire

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    A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE He acts like an animal‚ Has an animal’s habits! Eats like one‚ moves like one‚ Talks like one!” Directors Note “I don’t want realism. I want magic!” This fantasy of wanting an ideal or perfect world has turned into an illusion with people both on the outside and inside. This illusion of an idea life and personal identity is portrayed not only in the real world today‚ but also Williams’ “A Streetcar Named Desire”. Representative of

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    Streetcar named Desire

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    who lives in the past and gives into desire. Based on her inability to control her desires‚ Blanche is to blame. A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams describes Blanche Dubois as a neurotic central character who lives in a fantasy world of old south chivalry but cannot control her desires. Although Blanche is to blame for herown demise‚ society did play a role in the person she became. The story is about the fading and desperate Blanche DuBois and how her sensuous and brutal brother-in-law

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    Streetcar Named Desire

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    How does Williams alert us for the tragedy that is to follow in scene 1 of ’A Streetcar Named Desire’? ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ can be seen as a modern domestic tragedy‚ with base elements of traditional tragedy. Williams is able to alert us‚ with subtle hints in the very first scene of the play that a tragedy is going to occur‚ by creating an atmosphere that is both oppressive and claustrophobic. The portrayal of characters also adds to the tension as we realise that the two main protagonists

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    A StreetCar Named Desire

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    Stella as the link between them. Stage directions describe Stanley as a virulent character whose chief pleasure is women. His dismissal of Blanche’s beauty is therefore significant‚ because it shows that she does not exude his same brand of carnal desire. On the other hand‚ Blanche’s delicate manners and sense of propriety are offended by Stanley’s brutish virility. Stanley’s qualities—variously described as vitality‚ heartiness‚ brutality‚ primitivism‚ lust for life‚ animalistic—lead him over the

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    Streetcar Named Desire

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    A Streetcar Named Desire Essay 2. Human illusions have always been a powerful subject of plays‚ both tragic and comic. In what ways has Williams considered this aspect of human behavior and with what effects? In the play “A Streetcar Named Desire”‚ Tennessee Williams has considered human illusions through the use of a few conventions of drama. The language attributed to certain characters creates unrealistic images of approaches to situations at hand. He uses symbols and props to transmit the

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    A Streetcar Named Desire

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    How does Williams portray the character of Stanley and his attitudes? In your answer you should consider Williams’ use of language choices and dramatic techniques Stanley is the primary male character in A Streetcar Named Desire. His dominating role encompasses the cultural values of Elysian Fields‚ where men are breadwinners and women are the homemakers. On first appearance Stanley is portrayed as a physically attractive man and dominating attitude towards his wife. He is he is a proud ‘American’

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    A Streetcar Named Desire

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    Perspectives of Streetcar Streetcar is a play with many interpretations as John Bak’s survey of the critics illustrates ‘A play about post war F.D.R. America’ and Savran p.89 describes the 1940-50 American South with civilization in collapse with profound economic ‚social‚ and political reorientation. Another view is ‘A psychological study of a fragile mind‘s struggle to negotiate nostalgia with reality’. Kazan’s note book views Stanley as representing ‘the crude forces of violence‚ insensibility

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    Streetcar Named Desire

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    Streetcar Named Desire Scene 2 1) Stella tells Stanley that Belle Reve (Rive?) is lost. It leads to a little argument. He asks for the papers‚ looks inside her trunk. He finds clothes‚ letters from Blanche’s dead husband‚ in a tin box. Napoleonic code. Stanley reveals Stella’s pregnancy. Belle Reve was lost on mortgage‚ sold by Ambler & Ambler 2) Sees through Blanche’s trunk. “Your looks are okay” -> Blanche was expecting compliments 3) Beautiful dresses - no paper at the

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    ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ – Exploration Notes Our exploration into ‘Streetcar’ began with a focus on vocal awareness. Through developing the opening of the play through non-naturalism‚ I discovered how the use of voice and movement was key into creating the atmosphere of a multi-cultural and rundown area of New Orleans. I found that accent was a main factor in conveying the vibrant racial mix in the Quarter. The use of crescendos allowed us to create eerie atmosphere within Blanche’s living nightmare

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    13 November 2013 Desire and Death in A Streetcar Named Desire In A Streetcar Named Desire‚ Blanche refuses to accept reality and tries to resuscitate her idealized past through memory. She allows desire to conduct the way she lives and as a matter of fact is ultimately destroyed by the pursuit of her sexual desires. The correlation between death and desire is a prominent aspect that Williams explores in A Streetcar Named Desire. Throughout the play‚ death and desire are frequently and consistently

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