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A streetcar named desire 1

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Streetcar Named Desire
The author of the work, a streetcar named Desire, Tennessee Williams achieves in
depicting the psychology of the working class characters. During this time, the life of the
working class tended to be didactic. Williams intends to portray them as people who have
evolved psychologically. He represents them as the blue color characters without necessarily
romanticizing them. The stage effect in the streetcar represents the decision by Blanche into
madness. The work evokes the isolation of madness and terror.
The play takes place immediately after the World War II in Louisiana in the New
Orleans. The apartments where Kowalski lives are located next to a poor but a very charming
neighborhood. One of the characters, Stella, is pregnant at 25, and living with her husband. The
condition of the apartment is not very promising. Her elder sister arrives without their
expectations and with her belongings. While Stella tries to make a new life, Blanche if forced to
stay behind and look after their dying family. The abandonment of the family breeds contempt
between Stella and Blanche.
From the story, we can grasp that Blanche was married at some point in time at a tender
age, but her husband was deceased leaving her alone. Stanley is determined to destruct Stella
after their initial fight. The situation leads to build up of tension within the apartment. This

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causes Blanche to turn into excessive drinking for comfort (O'Shea 65-71). Stella fight with
Stanley on allegation of his cruelty but, unfortunately, the baby comes at the middle of the fight.
Mitch arrives, and Blanche asks him for a hand in marriage. She kicks her out after he declines
the request. Blanche suffers some mental illness after she fails to convince Stella of Stanley’s
assaults. However, the doctor takes her away to the asylum.
Blanche cannot believe the situation that she has ended in. She is lost, and her life seems
to be falling apart. She ends up with no place to go. Throughout her life, she has ridded the
metaphorical streetcars named “Cemeteries” and “Desire.” Williams drops some clues about the
reveal of the acts to follow. The play is a kind of a mystery where Stanley tries to investigate the
life of Blanche. William depicts Blanche as a person in a white suit and has a fluffy bodice. This
gives the overall effect of the play. Something in her suggests a moth. Blanches defensive
strategy is to be offensive. She criticizes Stella’s way of living while she has a worse lifestyle.
She defends herself on the loss of Belle Reve (Williams 11-17). The author brings Stanley and
Blanche as polar opposites. She is delicate and elegant while Stanley is primitive and brutal. The
poles, however, attract at some points though they seem incompatible.
The central theme in Williams’ work that dominates his work is illusion or fantasy. All
the words from Blanche are based on some illusions. She narrates her story about how she ended
up being at Stella’s door, which is an illusion. She uses fantasy as the only means of her defense
against the threats emanating from outside and her inner demons. She is not malice in her
deceits, but they come because of her weakness in confronting the truth. She sees the world, as it
“ought to” but not how it is. Fantasy through magic shields her from the numerous tragedies that
she faces. Her illusion is contrasted with the Stanley’s realism who finally wins. Stella is also

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Surname 1 Name Course Tutor Date Streetcar Named Desire The author of the work, a streetcar named Desire, Tennessee Williams achieves in depicting the psychology of the working class characters. During this time, the life of the working class tended to be didactic. Williams intends to portray them as people who have evolved psychologically. He represents them as the blue color characters without necessarily romanticizing them. The stage effect in the streetcar represents the decision by Blanche into madness. The work evokes the isolation of madness and terror. The play takes place immediately after the World War II in Louisiana in the New Orleans. The apartments where Kowalski lives are located next to a poor but a very charming neighborhood. One of the characters, Stella, is pregnant at 25, and living with her husband. The condition of the apartment is not very promising. Her elder sister arrives without their expectations and with her belongings. While Stella tries to make a new life, Blanche if forced to stay behind and look after their dying family. The abandonment of the family breeds contempt between Stella and Blanche. From the story, we can grasp that Blanche was married a ...
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