Analysis Of A Streetcar Named Desire By Tennessee Williams

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Reality can be difficult to bear and countless individuals attempt to find any way they can to escape it. Sometimes, the stress life brings can become too overbearing and taxing, causing mental and physical deterioration and fatigue. This was exactly the case for Blanche DuBois, the main character in A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams. She found herself lying to those in her life, including herself, concerning who she is and was. She refused to face reality and instead created a false persona she used to hide from her true existence in the shadows of insanity and deception. Slipping further away from what was genuine, wanting to live in a world of magic where none existed, she eventually was forced into a pit of lunacy and depression …show more content…

By embracing the darkness, she conceals her true age, her true self, and her true intentions, coming across as a completely different individual in order to receive what she wants, love and compassion. Wishing to live in a world of magic where she can be the person she wants to be, Blanche misrepresents herself in the shadows of lies, only telling “what ought to be the truth” (Williams 145). Blanche became accustomed to fearing the light, going so far as to conceal the exposed bulbs in her sister's apartment with paper lanterns to dim the brightness in order to create a new external reality for herself. The author strategically ties this symbol of light into his story, expressing the theme constructively through Blanche constantly suppressing her true self and refusing to come forth into the light and show her true colors. Even the guy she is beginning to fall in love with, Mitch, is lied to and shown the fake Blanche, and he consequently confronts her: “I don’t think I ever [saw] you in the light...I’ve never had a real good look at you” (Williams 143-144). In arguing for a while with her, Mitch ultimately turns the lamp to her, flicking the switch on and getting a feel for the true Blanche. He is instantly filled with disappointment, slapped in the face by the lies Blanche filled his ears with, unable to …show more content…

The main song being alluded to is "Varsouviana," a polka song that sounds a bit like merry-go-round music, which is constantly playing in Blanche’s head and disturbing her thoughts (Williams 141). Blanche’s husband had previously killed himself to this song, it now playing in repeat in her head and building up guilt on her shoulders as it was theoretically her fault. The tune works to set the scene for the instability overcoming Blanche, the creepy music inside her head unable to be heard by any other ears mixed with her inability to escape the guilt and anxiety that seems to blanket her every thought. Williams is able to incorporate this disturbing music on stage to show the audience Blanche’s slow decline of health, the insanity that steadily consumes her due to her lack of living with her present existence. Another song blended into the story is “It’s Only a Paper Moon” by Harold Arlen, a song that speaks on love and how it becomes an overwhelming aspect of people’s lives. It explains how love causes dependency as it morphs one's reality to fantasy: “It’s only a paper moon, just as phony as it can be— But it wouldn’t be make-believe If you believed in me!” (Williams 120-122). The song alludes to the illusory world she lives in, her desire for someone to join in on it through love as she slowly descends into madness, relying heavily on others to fuel her

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