Blanche Dubois Character Analysis Essay

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Blanche DuBois is a character full of life tragedies and struggles with her internal conflicts throughout the play. The first introduction of Blanche portrays her as a more cultured and highly sophisticated individual, than the average local in Elysian Fields. Dubois was quick to claim to be from an upper class of society, by daintily dressing in white suite with a fluffy bodice, necklace and earnings of pearl, white gloves and hat (Williams 95). The color white usually signified something that was pure and blameless, which was the total opposite with Blanche, all this was part of an image she was trying to portray. She tried covering up the truths of her life like; her sexual deviants, the loss of her job, and her alcoholism. All these events foreshadows the downfall of Blanche’s character which eventually led her to the insane asylum. She is an extremely complicated character who seems to be out of her element both physically and mentally, and seems to be stuck in her youthful years. Blanche’s mind is all disarrayed leaving her so lost and confused about life allowing her to lash out in ways that are sexual in nature. Her sexual tendencies are exceedingly inappropriate do to the nature of her actions. Balance tries to avoid the true reality of what was going on in her life, it was as if it was problematic for her to differentiate between reality and the desires of her heart. She just wanted a better future for herself, by trying to submerge herself in a life that was constructed off lies and deception. She captivated herself in romantic fantasies that begun as something that was harmless, then escalates into something that is morally unacceptable. The play starts off with Blanche and her pathological lying, she tel... ... middle of paper ... ...anche is sent to the insane asylum, ironically, it was probably the best thing for her, because at this point she was “boxed out of her mind,” (Williams 142) as Mitch has stated. As the doctor finally gets her under his control and she realizes what is best, Blanche’s final words, “I have always depended on the kindness of strangers” (Williams 155), implies that all she could expect out of a man is small acts of kindness and her future of not being truly loved by a man is inevitable. Her reputation in Bella Reeve was destroyed, and because she was too focused on her own desires for “magic” (Williams 143), Blanche DuBois never stood a real chance of changing her past and leaving the ill-mannered, sexual deviant persona she developed in her desperation to be stroke her ego and prove to herself that she is still physically and sexually attractive to the opposite sex.

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