Preview

Character Analysis: A Streetcar Named Desire By Tennessee Williams

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1339 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Character Analysis: A Streetcar Named Desire By Tennessee Williams
The Truth Hurts
A Streetcar Named Desire written by Tennessee Williams is a play about a southern lady named Blanche from Mississippi visiting her sister Stella, who is married to Stanley and currently living in Elysian Fields, New Orleans. Blanche arrives in Elysian Fields, and throughout her entire stay with Stella and Stanley, there is tension and conflict occurring in Stella’s house. Even though Blanche and Stella were brought up in the South under wealthy conditions, the conflict is mainly caused by Blanche’s dislike of Stanley because, as a blue-collar worker, Stanley's status is lower than the DuBois’. In another aspect, Stanley’s conflict is caused by him being suspicious of Blanche since her arrival. Blanche explains to Stella that
…show more content…
One reason Blanche would rather live a life of deception is because the truth hurts too much. Similarly when light is shown on a person who has been in a dark place for a very long time, it will hurt their eyes. To Blanche the truth is very painful and being unable to face the truth, she says she has been telling “what ought to be truth” (1830). She wishes that the lies she has told were true. Repeatedly, Blanche avoids light because she feels guilty of her sins, is trying to hide her lies, or does not want to face the …show more content…
Like many other women, Blanche does not want anyone to know her age, especially Mitch. For the sake of vanity, women are usually unwilling to reveal their true age and this has become acceptable in our culture. In the same way, Blanche hides from well lit areas due to the fact that she does not want to face the reality that she is getting old. She tells Mitch that she is younger than Stella “she’s somewhat older than I. Just slightly. Less than a year” (1799). Right after saying this, she immediately proceeds to ask Mitch to cover the light bulb with a decoration as she has become aware of the light after telling a lie. Blanche also avoids the light because she does not want her wrinkles to show, exclaiming “Daylight never exposed so total a ruin!” (1782). It’s evident that Blanche is definitely hiding from any well lit area, especially around Mitch, as he says "I don’t think I ever seen you in the light... You never want to go out till after six and then it’s always some place that’s not lighted much” (1830). In a social psychology context, as long as a form of practice is accepted in one's culture, that practice is considered a type of adaptation. Blanche's lying about her age and trying to look pretty all the time is commonly acceptable for a woman to behave that way. However, if that practice goes too extreme and causes impairment in daily activities, it is considered a type of maladaptation which will potentially lead to

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    In scene four of “ A Streetcar Named Desire” Blanche attempts to convince Stella that she can get out of her situation with Stanley, but Stella insists she is not in anything she wished to get out of. Stella makes it clear that she is happy about her relationship with Stanley through their sexual chemistry by saying “ But there are things that happen between a man and a woman in the dark”. Stella believes that there is nothing wrong and she can’t understand why Blanche is so frantic. Blanche tries to persuade Stella that her situation with Stanley is just desire by arguing, “ What you are talking about is brutal desire- just- Desire!- the name of that rattle-trap streetcar that bangs through the Quarter, up one old narrow street and down another…”…

    • 212 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the movie, A Street Car Named Desire, Blanche uses the quote, “I don't want realism. I want magic! Yes, Yes, magic! I try to give that to people." to explain her desire for her fantasy life to become reality. Blanches fantasy life would restore her youth, forgive her past and she would be more welcomed by people like Stanley and Mitch. I do agree with her statement, and believe that living in a “fantasy world” for a short period of time can be beneficial, but I do not agree with the circumstances Blanches is doing so by. Blanche wants to forget the death of her husband, the termination of her position as a schoolteacher caused by a discovered affair with a high school aged boy and the loss of her childhood home and plantation. Some of…

    • 307 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    wants to portray his character. When Blanche first appears in ‘Elysian Fields', she is presented through her ‘incongruous' appearance:…

    • 1296 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Arthur Miller said, The flaw, or crack in the characters, is really nothing-and need be nothing, but his inherent unwillingness to remain passive in the face of what he conceives to be a challenge to his dignity, his image of his rightful status. Blanche refuses to remain passive throughout the play, she continuously fights for her dignity by truly making herself and others believe that she is the “Southern-belle” should be. You can see this in the way she dresses and presents herself. “You come in here and sprinkle the place with powder and spray perfume and cover the light bulb with a paper lantern, and lo and behold the place has turned into Egypt and you are the Queen of the Nile!” Blanche…

    • 709 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While Janie and Blanche have their similarities, they are also very different. Blanche is born white and affluent; Janie is born black and poor. Blanche grows up on an old plantation in Mississippi, and Janie is raised in Florida by her grandmother, who has a house in the backyard of a white family she works for. Janie is brought up with their children; in fact, until she sees a picture of herself standing next to them, Janie does not realize she is black. While Janie eventually learns to not care about what people think of her and become self-sufficient, Blanche is always depending on others. She relies on Stella to take care of her. When Stanley threatens to send Blanche away, she quickly begins a relationship with Mitch, hoping to secure her future by marrying him. However, this is unsuccessful: Blanche eventually goes insane after she is raped by Stanley, and is sent to an asylum in the country. In contrast, Janie gets everything she wants out of life: sexual love and adventure. Tea Cake provides for her sexually and allows her to be the person she wants to be, unlike her previous two husbands, who each had their own ideas as to how she should act and live out her life. When Pheoby attempts to dissuade her from seeing Tea Cake, she tells her “Ah done lived Grandma’s way, now Ah mean tuh live mine” (Hurston 114). Janie has been living the life her grandmother planned out for her, but she is unhappy, so she has decided to start over and go her own way. Janie is the better feminist protagonist for her time period; unlike Blanche, she makes choices based on her own beliefs and desires rather than worrying about how those around her may perceive her.…

    • 1004 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the movie Helter Skelter, LiLiCo is the top supermodel who is a product of excessive full body cosmetic surgery driven by vanity and greed. "Pretty on the outside, but just like a fruit the bugs have eaten from within" (Uda, Amagi, & Ninagawa, 2012). LiLiCo is the manifestation of beauty and vanity, and her body is unable to withstand the burdens of multiple surgeries as her body deteriorates. She is nothing more but looks; she is corrupted by the importance of being at the top of the modelling world as her greediness eats her inside and out. In the movie A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche DuBois constantly fears death along with the manifestation of aging and loss of beauty. “And turn that over-light off! Turn that off! I won’t be looked at in this merciless glare!” (Williams, 1947, p. 18). Throughout the whole movie, Blanche refuses to tell anyone her age and is never seen under the light because it will reveal her faded looks. She uses the shadow to feign her appearance and personality. Blanche, a flirtatious Southern-belle, also frequently asserts her sexuality towards young men as a coping mechanism with the belief that she will be able to avoid aging along with death itself. In both of the movies, the protagonists conditioned themselves that nobody will love them and that everybody will eventually leave their side if everyone found out their true nature…

    • 1007 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The motif of light is incorporated from the very beginning. In Scene 1 when Blanche first arrives at Stella’s home, Blanche requests that Stella “turn that over-light off” for she “won’t be looked at in this merciless glare!” Before Stella even has the chance to greet her sister, whom she has not seen for a long period of time, Blanche turns on the defensive. Blanche’s immediate request to turn out the light signifies her efforts to hide from the truth. The reader may fail to receive the significance of this request for it occurs before any suspicion or speculation is made of Blanche. However, this reflects Blanche’s guilty conscience, for, as she knows, and as the reader soon comes to see, if the “light” is kept on, she will be seen in a way that shames her. It is interesting to reflect on the introduction of light as a motif after reading the play. By the end of the play, the reader is aware of Blanche’s real life and is able to understand all that she is “hiding” in the shadows.…

    • 846 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It his hard to tell whether or not Blanche is a nonstop liar or just out of her mind. She is so terrified that people will hate her for not having a perfect past that she lies about everything. She just can't realize that while she may be in love with the fake, others hate being in an ignorant state. Mitch may have stuck by her if she had only told him about her past. "I don't mind you being older than I thought. But all of the rest of it-- Christ! That pitch about your ideals being so old-fashioned and all the malarkey that you've dished out all summer. Oh, I knew you weren't sixteen anymore. But, I was full enough to believe you were straight."(Mitch, page 117) This shows the response that she got to all of her deceit. I think she does this because she feels so terrible that she found out about her dead husbands doings, and she would never want anybody to feel bad about knowing her mis-doings. Maybe one day she will be able to let someone get to know the real Blanche, that way they can truly understand her. Im afraid however that Blanche believes that a woman can't be accepted without illusion. "I know I fib a good deal. After all, a woman's charm is fifty percent illusion."Blanche, 41.…

    • 867 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Have you ever looked at someone when walking down the street, at work, or at school and wondered what their past consists of? If they had a rough childhood or if they grew up with a silver spoon in their mouth? Blanche Dubois past consists of a dead husband, her compulsive lying, and prostitution. Blanches past is what led to the eventual demise of her character in A Streetcar Named Desire.…

    • 580 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Blanche is sufficiently self-aware to know that she cannot survive in the world as it is. Reality is too harsh, so she must somehow create illusions that will allow her to maintain her delicate, fragile hold on life. “A woman’s charm is fifty percent illusion” (scene 2) she acknowledges to Stanley. Later in the story line when Mitch wants to switch the light on so that he can get a realistic look at her, she tells him that she does not want realism, she wants magic. When Mitch turns on the light during that scene it reveals much more to the audience than just what she really looks like, but it shows that all this time she has been living her life in the dark, hiding herself in the murky shadows of her promiscuity. Her…

    • 331 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Another reason why Blanche becomes insane is the lost of her family property and her job. Indeed, she has lived her whole life in Laurel, a small southern town; her family has aristocratic roots and teaches Blanche about some of the finer things in life. But, after her husband decease, she is forced to sell Belle Reve, the family mansion, to pay for…

    • 666 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout the play, Blanche avoids appearing in direct, bright light, especially in front of her suitor, Mitch. She also refuses to reveal her age, and it is clear that she avoids light in order to prevent him from seeing the reality of her fading beauty. In general, light also symbolizes the reality of Blanche's past. She is haunted by the ghosts of what she has lost—her first love, her purpose in life, her dignity, and the genteel society (real or imagined) of her ancestors. Blanche covers the exposed lightbulb in the Kowalski apartment with a Chinese paper lantern, and she refuses to go on dates with Mitch during the daytime or to well-lit locations. Mitch points out Blanche's avoidance of light in Scene Nine, when he confronts her with the stories Stanley has told him of her past. Mitch then forces Blanche to stand under the direct light. When he tells her that he doesn't mind her age, just her deceitfulness, Blanche responds by saying that she doesn't mean any harm. She believes that magic, rather than reality, represents life as it ought to be. Blanche's inability to tolerate light means that her grasp on reality is also nearing its end. In Scene Six, Blanche tells Mitch that being in love with her husband, Allan Grey, was like having the world revealed in bright, vivid light. Since Allan's suicide, Blanche says, the bright light has been missing. Through…

    • 565 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    English

    • 1146 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In “streetcar named desire” the sisters have been separated for a long time as Stella marries a polish man and goes to where he lives whereas blanche stay because she has a good job. This has an effect on the sisterly relationship as many differences arise which they both cannot seem to understand each other. This is because, blanche is a more educated women who cannot except the fact that her sister has married a polish man who is in a lower class then were blanche and Stella are from. However When Stella chose to leave Belle Reve and marry Stanley, she made a…

    • 1146 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Blanche is portrayed as upper class, however this is not totally the case, her façade seems to be of this class, however, she is slipping down the social scale, from being an upper class plantation owner, to lowering her self to living in a working class area. This is the opposite of Nora, as her class is permanent; she is a comfortable middle class and is happy with this, as she has the full monetary support of…

    • 1763 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the second place, Stanley who possesses an animalistic physical vigor is a direct factor to Blanche’s tragedy. His intense hatred of Blanche is motivated in part by the aristocratic past Blanche represents. He also sees her as untrustworthy and does not appreciate the way she attempts to fool him and his friends into thinking she is better than they are. Under this suspicion and considering she cheated her sister of money gained by selling their old plantation Belle Reve, despised him for his lack of nurture, being brutish, primitive, apelike, rough and attempted to convince Stella to leave him who are the…

    • 970 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays