Character Analysis Of Blanche Williams In Tennessee Williams A Streetcar Named Desire

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Blanche Dubois provides as Williams’ core personage throughout ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’. Her vulnerability in a changing society and monomania with her appearance, along with her mental fragility both cumulates pathos from the audience and draws in our attention. Furthermore, the contrast between a pure southern belle and a cheap seductress, as well as her relationship with Stanley, allows Williams to explore ideas relating to the patriarchal society of the time. As the play progresses and the audience observe Blanche endure an exigent predicament, we see her come forth as the conspicuous protagonist in the play and a victim of circumstance.

Notably, even Blanche’s name, which translates to white, is symbolic of her complex nature. White …show more content…

Her appearance in scene one echoes this sense of purity, as Blanche is ‘daintily dressed’ in a ‘white suit’ with ‘white gloves’. By covering herself in white, Williams may be implying that her body is virtuous which may carry a sense of foreboding as she has arrived into Elysian Fields- the place of death for the virtuous in Greek mythology. Blanche is also compared to a moth, a Lepidoptera with an ‘uncertain manner’, a sense of fragility and also a propioceptive attraction to that which will a cause their demise. Williams notes that her beauty must ‘avoid strong light’ outlining the vulnerability of Blanche and later on, her insecurities with her appearance. This makes Blanche appear fragile, as a veritable moth which can be wounded beyond-repair from even the smallest of touches to its wings. During our introduction to Blanche, she appears …show more content…

The development and changes for Stella in contrast with Blanche may further illustare her inability to adapt and change. Whilst alone, Blanche sits ‘stiffly’ with ‘hunched shoulders’ which conveys that she feels uncomfortable and perhaps even on-edge. Naturally, these words are in juxtaposition with her ‘delicate’ nature the audience observed previously. This could create the impression that Blanche puts on a façade to impress others, which is unlike the way she is whilst in solitude, and also relates to a prominent theme channelled through Blanche of illusions vs. realism. Blanche’s nerves and instability are highlighted when she responds to a cat screeching with a ‘startled gesture’. It is also rather notable that her immediate response to this discomfort is to remove a whisky bottle and toss ‘it down’. The use of alcohol to calm her nerves is in particular contrast with the aura of delicateness she conveyed previously, as it would not be expected of an upper-class woman from Southern aristocracy. The use

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