A Streetcar Named Desire Blanche Dubois Essay

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    In Tennessee Williams's written play, A Streetcar Named Desire, one of the most symbolic characters is Blanche DuBois. Blanche represents one of the themes of the play, too much desire and not enough control can end very badly. She has very little self-control and too much desire for attention, particularly from men. Blanche is a victim of many men in the play who take advantage of her, use her and deceive her. She often puts herself in the position to be used by men, but she is also a victim of

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    Tennessee Williams’, A Streetcar Named Desire, follows Blanche DuBois as she leaves her life in Laurel, Mississippi to try to create a new start for herself in Elysian Fields, New Orleans. Blanche lives in a world of illusion which contrasts that of her sister Stella and brother-in-law, Stanley. Her reliance on the self-made fantasy, and even delusion, is revealed throughout each scene. Blanche’s illusions are placed into different symbols of A Streetcar Named Desire and when rigorously investigated

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    Every person in their life has been a Blanche at some point or another in their life. I know that I have done this personally and am working on bettering that part of myself but I too have been unrealistically optimistic, or in the word of Mrs. Dubois “I don’t want realism I want magic.” In the beautifully tragic story of A Streetcar Named Desire we find that Blanche Dubois has stepped into the next level of fantasy and has not only tried to make others believe the lies she tells but has begun to

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    Summary: In the play “A streetcar Named Desire” it centers on a women named Blanche Dubois. She travels from the railroad in New Orleans to a street formally known as Elysian Fields, where she meets her pregnant sister Stella and her husband Stanly Kowalski. Having lost her homestead, husband and fortification, Blanche turns to her only close relative for support. Reaching middle age, Blanche emotionally is unhinged and is in financial crises with the loss of her southern bell life. After explaining

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    The character of Blanche Dubois in the play A Streetcar Named Desire is depicted as a victim of her traditional southern upbringing, she struggles to find her place in society where the values of a Southern Belle are no longer relevant nor exist. Blanche Dubois is portrayed as the weaker sex, who is then over powered by Stanley Kowalski, her sister’s working class husband. Blanche Dubois shows a great psychological instability when she is unable to live up to the expectations of a classic and proper

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    In Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche DuBois desires to be viewed as a pure and innocent girl despite her sex and scandal filled past. In Scene 5, Blanche attempts to explain the way someone needs to look if they want to come off as innocent and appealing: “When people are soft---soft people have got to shimmer and glow---they’ve got to put on soft colors, the colors of butterfly wings, and put a---paper lantern over the light. . . . It isn’t enough to be soft. You’ve got to be

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    In A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams, Blanche Dubois’ destruction and eccentric behavior can be justified through a psychoanalytic lens, arguing that her unhealthy interactions with others and her eventual departure from reality can be attributed to societal factors that affects her upbringing and molds her personality. Psychoanalytically, it is her lack of self-realization as well as failure to balance her psyche to achieve her desires that causes mental chaos. Altogether, Blanche’s

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    20 What Blanche means when she says “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers” that due to her past issues and conflicts that Blanche experienced she desires that attention and compliments from strangers and eventually counted on the kindness to make her feel more confident and fulfill her emptiness along with all the insecurities she had. Blanche usually wants someone to be with her to say they love her in order for her to feel happy. The reason for that is because Blanche doesn't all

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    Blanche is living in a time where it is a lot more difficult for women than it is for women in the present time. Blanche’s situation is one side of the representation of the play’s juxtaposition between the gender roles of men and women. As a woman, Blanche is meant to be the character that showcases women’s struggle. She was married but her husband died. She inherited an estate but had to sell it to pay off debts and creditors, “The four letter word deprived us of our plantation…” (Williams 2314)

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    Throughout his play, “A Streetcar Named Desire,” Tennessee Williams uses symbolism to create the characterization of certain individuals. Blanche is certainly one of the most complex of characters, and readers over time learn more and more about her mysterious and even suspicious background. There is much evidence throughout the play to support the idea that Blanche longs to share the secrecy of her past with someone, but because she is fearful of being vulnerably truthful, she hides herself in the

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