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How Does Tennessee Williams Use Symbols In A Streetcar Named Desire

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Not always five o’clock
A symbol is something for or regarded as representing something else. In the play, A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams he uses many symbols in his story. Some symbols are more defined than others and have a more complex meaning. Alcohol is used throughout the whole story and has the most vivid reasoning. Between the beginning and the end of the story Protagonist characters like Blanche, Stella, Stanley have used representation of alcohol. Blanche drinks the most during the story, Stella does not drink any alcohol, and Stanley does not handle his alcohol very well. Williams typically used alcohol to represent the good and bad of each character.
Blanche is Stella’s sister who had come to visit her after the …show more content…

Almost every time he is caught drinking an instance happens. These instances show his true colors and who he really is. Although Blanche is the younger sister she acts as a mom. The reason she acts as a mom is because she is always right. In scene four she tells Stella the reality of Stanley that he “He acts like an animal.” The bad the Williams is representing in Stanley is his actions. Stanley has the most vulgar actions in A Streetcar Named Desire. He does not just target them towards one specific person but to each person he comes in contact with. At some point in the story each character gets criticized by Stanley. Williams does this to show Male actions back in the early 1900’s. Alcohol was just a go to drink when someone felt stressed. Stanley used that as an excuse multiple times. In scene ten Stanley and Blanche are alone together at the house, while Stella is at the hospital getting ready to deliver the baby. While alone at the house Stanley insist on drinking whether he is stressed or not. This causes him to get out of control, resulting in confronting Blanche. The conversation between the two does not turn out well. The alcohol had gotten to Stanley preventing him to attack Blanche “So I could twist the broken end in your face.” Before Stanley had the chance to effortlessly abuse Blanche, she was smart enough to threaten him, but that did not stop him. Williams incorporated alcohol to show what

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