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The Madness of Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire Essay

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Tennessee Williams wrote about Blanche DuBois: 'She was a demonic character; the size of her feelings was too great for her to contain without the escape of madness.' Williams uses Blanche DuBois as a vehicle to explore several themes that interested him, one of these being madness. His own sister, Rose, was lobotomised in his absence and later institutionalised leading many critics to believe that the character of Blanche may have arisen from events in his own life. Blanche's tragic past involving both the death of her "young" husband and her consequent promiscuity with "young men" created an overwhelming amount of emotion for Blanche, which, as Williams suggests, "was too great for her to contain". As to whether her escape …show more content…

Excessive drinking is one of the aspects of Blanche's life that she lies about - "I rarely touch [alcohol]" and Stanley's reply of "some people rarely touch it but it touches them often" is quite appropriate because he can see through the excuses as alcohol "touches" him. Where Stanley is honest about his drinking, Blanche hides it. She uses alcohol to escape reality and to escape her emotions but is at the same time she uses lies to escape from the actual truth of her drinking problem by lying to those around her; she tells Mitch "Three is my limit". It is obvious that Blanche is attempting to escape or running away from something as the reason for her arrival is left ambiguous and this "desire" to escape is illustrated in her comment towards the end of scene 2; she says, "I ought to go [to the sky] on a rocket that never comes down." As well as revealing Blanche's need to hide from reality, this may also be a suggestion of the first signs of madness. Her closing comment at the end of that scene is then also quite interesting - "the blind are leading the blind" may be a reference to her voluntary blindness to the reality of her situation but it could also be interpreted as her view of how those around her, namely her sister, are blind to her lies. The fact that Blanche sees herself and her sister as being blind is also interesting to note as despite the different paths the two sisters have chosen to take, their similarities

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