Desire and Dominance: A Streetcar Named Desire Analysis

1851 Words4 Pages

Human conflict is ever-present in sex and desire. But, not until the streetcar named Desire was first shown in 1947 had the corporeal act of sex been so openly depicted on stage as a basis of dominance and power. The streetcar in the New Orleans Street, Elysian Fields, is an urban harsh world, where the laws of nature are the enduring rules of engagement. As the wild sex and violence are intimately connected, Intercourse is a product of aggressive dominance, competition and submission to a certain extent than romance. Although Williams repeatedly claimed that his piece cautioned against the world where brutes were permitted to reign, the play 's end, shows the sexually imposing dominance placed upon Blanche by Stanley, whom demolished her illusions …show more content…

He beats Stella 's resistance by throwing the radio out the window. "Drunk-drunk-animal thing you," Stella yells, directly rebelling against Stanley 's authority. Stanley behaves as masculine by charging at her. When the women go upstairs, Stanley stands outside yelling to Stella "like a baying hound". Stanley fakes a submissive posture, kneeling before her and resting his head on her stomach. With this action, Stanley surrenders to Stella 's authority. Part of Stella 's attraction to Stanley may come from the thrill and power of being able to tame such a forceful man. The switch provides insight to Williams ' view of sex and violence. It is severely reported that Williams participated in what would be defined as "rough sex" (Tischler 53). In this custom, sex has more to do with the swapping of submission and power than physical incentive. This dynamic is nothing new considering that in the animal world, sex is often used as a way of asserting superiority and establishing social ranks. Reasonably, fighting has become normal in the Kowalski’s household. Only until they feel the painful lows of verbal and physical abuse, they experience heightened feelings of passion and …show more content…

His recklessness is part of his appeal from Stella’s part. Although this type of relationship goes against her childhood, she is honest about her desires. "I 'm not in anything I want to get out of," Stella continually tells Blanche who formulates a fantasy of getting money from an old lover for them to escape. Stella understands compromise. She is realistic. She sees Stanley 's gambling, drinking, and violent outbursts as "his pleasure, like hers in movies and bridge". She believes that people "have got to accept each other 's habits". Cleaning up after Stanley 's violent spells is just a part of living with him. Unlike Blanche, she knows that life is no fairytale, negociations must be reached. Stella is proof of the statement that "there are things that happen between a man and a woman in the dark-that sort of make everything else seem-unimportant". She lives in a decrepit house, filled with smashed glass, part of the noisy part of town, and yet she is

Open Document