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  • Superfluous In Stella And Stanley's Lifestyle
    772 words
    Tennessee Williams gives insight into three ordinary lives in his play, "A Streetcar Named Desire" which is set in the mid-1930's in New Orleans. The main characters in the play are Blanche, Stanley, and Stella. All three of these characters suffer from personalities that differentiate each of them to great extremes. Because of these dramatic contrarieties in attitudes, there are mounting conflicts between the characters throughout the play. The principal conflict lies between Blanche and Stanle...
  • Addition Throughout The Novel Blanche
    982 words
    Tennessee William's novel, A Streetcar Named Desire, is the story of the brutish Stanley Kowalski and his meek wife Stella, a New Orleans couple whose lives are turned upside down with the arrival of Stella's neurotic, Southern belle sister Blanche who is immediately drawn into a battle of wills with Stanley. Blanche's childlike helplessness, romantic desires, and pretensions to aristocracy completely collapse when Stanley's ruthless exposure of her past brings about Blanche's final disintegrati...
  • William's A Streetcar Named Desire
    2,759 words
    Adcock 1 Tennessee Williams, an American playwright, has been known as the most prominent American southern dramatist. He won his first Pulitzer Prize with Streetcar Named Desire. In this play, Williams shows the need for belief in human value against the natural realistic world. He uses symbols to develop the characters and theme of illusion verses reality within Streetcar Named Desire. The two main characters are Blanche DuBois, an aristocrat southern belle, and Stanley Kowalski the "gaudy see...
  • Blanche And Stella
    2,504 words
    A Streetcar Named Desire: Analysis From the beginning, the three main characters of Streetcar are in a state of tension. Williams establishes that the apartment is small and confining, the weather is hot and oppressive, and the characters have good reason to come into conflict. The South, old and new, is an important theme of the play. Blanche and her sister come from a dying world. The life and pretensions of their world are becoming a thing of memory: to drive home the point, the family mansio...
  • A Streetcar Named Desire Use Of Symbolism and Color
    1,309 words
    "Symbols are nothing but the natural speech of drama... the purest language of plays". Once, quoted as having said this, Tennessee Williams has certainly used symbolism and colour extremely effectively in his play, 'A Streetcar Named Desire'. A moving story about fading Southern belle Blanche DuBois and her lapse into insanity, 'A Streetcar Named Desire' contains much symbolism and clever use of colour. This helps the audience to link certain scenes and events to the themes and issues that Willi...
  • Similarities Between Blanche And Laura
    886 words
    'A Streetcar Named Desire'; and 'The Glass Menageries were written by Tennessee William in the late Thirties, where the depression made countless of people struggled in poverty. Both of the plays used the typical American family during the Thirties as the background setting. There were many similarities between the plays: including characters and events. Did Tennessee William write the same play twice? Or, did the plays each hold a different meaning underneath? Before analyzing the two plays, we...
  • Williams Sides With Blanche
    1,631 words
    The Realistic View-Point of A Streetcar Named Desire Through out the twentieth century, many great writers have come along and altered the publics thoughts of normality, and in many cases shocked their audiences by presenting them with the brutal truth. This is exactly what the drama A Streetcar Named Desire accomplished. Whether, intentionally or unintentionally, Tennessee Williams succeeded in illustrating the need to forget what was in the past and stressed the idea of looking ahead to the fu...
  • Blanche's World
    1,016 words
    Blanche Dubious, appropriately dressed in white, is first introduced as a symbol of innocence and chastity. Aristocratic, refined, and sensitive, this delicate beauty has a moth-like appearance. She has come to New Orleans to seek refuge at the home of her sister Stella and her coarse Polish husband, Stanley. With her nervous and refined nature, Blanche is a clear misfit in the Kowalski's apartment. Blanche represents a deep-seated attachment to the past. She has lived her whole life in Laurel, ...
  • Mitch Visits Blanche
    1,134 words
    The main character, Blanche from the play A Streetcar Named Desire witnesses many tragedies. These incidents are forever etched in her memory. She comes to stay with her sister Stella thinking she is running away from her past but instead her past catches up with her and from depression gradually turns insane. Blanche's pathetic disintegration begins with the loss of her loved ones, the abandonment of Mitch and getting raped by Stanley. The unfortunate incidents of death that Blanche witness beg...
  • Mitch And Blanche
    712 words
    Following the departure of Blanche, the men continue their poker game. Mitch appears to be lost in a different world. His thoughts are pre-occupied with Blanche and their affair. Stanley suddenly snaps at Mitch, which really aggravates him. The two men have a long dispute concerning Blanche. Mitch gets up and leave. He strolls around town, not wishing to return home. He recalls the times he spent with Blanche. A long tape of memories runs through his mind. Upon his return home, that night, Mitch...
  • Stanley And Blanche
    1,168 words
    With reference to the first four scenes of the play, discuss the significance of setting and stage directions to our understanding and appreciate of the play Tennessee William's uses the setting and stage directions to help reinforce the various themes such as desire and death and to help the audience to relate further to the characters. This helps the audience to understand the scenes in greater detail and to ultimately increase the enjoyment of the play. When Streetcar was written, Southern Am...
  • Unsympathetic Blanche Dubois
    1,523 words
    The Unsympathetic Blanche DuBois in "A Streetcar Named Desire" Blanche DuBois is the most famous female character in A Streetcar Named Desire written by Tennessee Williams. It is an unusual observation to make about the heroine of the Pulitzer prize-winning play, A Streetcar Named Desire, but a very concise and perceptive characterization. Although Blanche is considered to be the principal character, she most often emerges as an unsympathetic character -- a selfish, proud woman, a sexual predato...
  • Stanley And Blanche
    1,389 words
    A streetcar named desire is a play written by Tennessee Williams and is about the two basic humans drives; which are death and desire. The two main drives could be representative of the state of America after WWI a country wavering between a dying past and the adolescent new world. The reader / viewer of the play will experience these two basic drives through the characters culture, background, imagery, music and symbols. For the characters to have the direct effect of representing the text's un...
  • Blanche As Stella's Past
    1,672 words
    Blanche Dubois is by far the most complex character of the play. She had suffered through the deaths of all her loved ones and the loss of her old way of life. At the mere age of sixteen, she eloped with a young boy named Allan, whom she worshipped and loved passionately. Life with Allan was sheer bliss for Blanche, but her faith was shattered when she discovered he was a bi-sexual degenerate. She expressed her disappointment in him, prompting him to commit suicide and then holding herself respo...
  • Stella The Details Of Blanche's Promiscuous Life
    2,076 words
    In analyzing Blanche DuBois, one of the main characters in A Streetcar Named Desire, it is crucial to examine not only the literal text, but also the symbolism conveyed in the play. Williams creates symbols which, as the story progresses, grow less and less sane. Following artists like Salvador Dali, he uses insanity, like intoxication and the dream, as a kind of instrument for the organization and interpretation of experience (Mendelson and Bryfonski 541). The use of insanity has advantages ove...
  • Poker Stanley And Stella
    2,233 words
    A Streetcar named Desire – The Presentation Of Masculinity in Scene 3 The evidence of masculinity in scene three is shown through dialogue, stage direction and description of the surroundings. The introduction to the dramatic purpose of the poker party demonstrates Stanley's domination over his friends through the way in which he makes all the decisions about the game. He also shows domination over his wife by hitting her during an argument. Scene three opens with a description of surround...
  • Total Stereotype As Blanche And Stella
    664 words
    A Streetcar Named Desire Blanche or Stella? Blanche or Stella? A question being tossed around in classrooms in Eastport lately. Tennessee Williams, in A Streetcar Named Desire, creates two sisters who each clearly portray a stereotype. Stella, the sister in distress, perhaps the more reserved and meek of the two, is in a marriage with a very guy ish-guy and she probably has no way out. Enter Blanche, right from the traditional Southern past, to attempt some sort of a rescue. It is disputed if Bl...
  • Stanley And Blanche On Their Respective Levels
    1,260 words
    Tennessee Williams? A Streetcar Named Desire is considered by many critics to be what is called a flawed masterpiece. This is because William's work utilizes and wonderfully blends both tragic and comic elements that serve to shroud the true nature of the hero and heroine thereby not allowing the reader to judge them on solid actuality. Hence, Williams has been compared to writers such as Shakespeare who in literature have created a sense of ambiguity and uncertainty in finding a sole? view or a...
  • Stanley And Blanche
    1,269 words
    A Streetcar Named Desire is a classic American drama written by a classic American writer, Tennessee Williams. Born in 1911, in Columbus, Mississippi, Williams went on to graduate from the University of Iowa in 1938. He achieved his first successes with the production of two plays, The Glass Menagerie (1945) and A Streetcar Named Desire (1947). In 1947, he won a Pulitzer Prize for A Streetcar Named Desire. When analyzing the main character of the story, Blanche Dubois, it is crucial to use both ...
  • Blanche And Stella
    1,892 words
    Look again at scene one, including stage directions. Do you find that The Scene prepares an audience for what is To follow in the play? The first scene introduces us to the major characters and themes of the play. The three major characters being Blanche, Stella and Stanley. The themes include madness, jealousy, death and the Old World changing into the new. Scene one introduces us to the environment, disrupts the Kowalski household as Blanche arrives and appears to resolve it as Stanley accepts...

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