A street car Named Desire

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“A Street Car Named Desire” is a critically acclaimed play by Tennessee Williams, which emphasizes the sexual desire and tension between characters Blanche Dubois, Stanley Kowalski, Stella Kowalski and Harold Mitchell. Throughout the play, Blanche is so nervous and on edge that a slight disturbance could shatter her sanity. However, Blanches ambition for love and “magic” is what truly affects the other characters in the play and cements the idea that Blanche is a proper lunatic. A street car named desire not only focuses on tense family relationships present in the play but as well as the affects of insanity caused by an individual ambition, which in this case is the desire for love through the protagonist Blanche Dubois. In the play “ A street car named desire” by Tennessee Williams, Williams creates the idea that Blanche’s crazed ambition for “magic” and love is impossible because of her destitute and unforgettable past and her ambition for love leads to her own collapse and downfall. Early in Blanche’s life before she arrived at the Kowalski’s residence, Blanche already led a life of promiscuity and alcoholism, which is exhibited when “she pours a half tumbler of whiskey and tosses it down.” Additionally, Blanche loses her job due to an inappropriate relationship with a student, and her excessive drinking throughout the play was triggered when she unknowingly married a homosexual man that later committed suicide after the discovery of his sexual preference. These events show who Blanche is as a person and how she operates in the world. She relies on her ability to act as an object of male sexual desire since her interactions with the males in the play always commence with flirtation. This is demonstrated when Blanche tells St... ... middle of paper ... ...o” is constantly heard playing outside the apartment when Blanche talks about the loss of her family and Belle Reve. However, it is also present during her meeting and kissing with the young man. The “blue piano” thus is symbolic of depression, loneliness, and Blanche’s ambition for love (which the color blue suggests). In conclusion, Blanche’s desire for love and “magic” is unattainable because of her unforgettable past. Blanche’s history led her down a path of depression, alcohol and promiscuity and although she attempts to hide her past behind her clothes and paper lanterns, she battles with reality everyday. In the end however, Williams’ idea that love leads to destruction appears to lead to Blanche’s downfall, where as she walks out of the apartment and Stanley along with his entourage stand up to offer their respect/condolences to her as if she was dead.

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