Blanche DuBois

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    The three main characters, Stanley Kowalski, Blanche Dubois, and Stella Kowalski, have diverse methods for managing the conflicts in their brutal surroundings in which they live in, as they all face distinctive crisis. This…

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    to emotional exclamations in regard to personal self-awareness. Blanche DuBois, throughout the play, is intensely worried about her appearance and self-perception. This often manifest itself as a fear of bright and harsh light. However, Blanche also relies on liquid during her moments of self-awareness: [Looking down at her glass, which shakes in her hand.] “You’re all I’ve got in the world, and you’re not glad to see me!”. Blanche becomes aware of her sisters reaction to her presence and as it…

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    In his 1940s tragedy, A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams explores the helpless psychological downfall of Blanche Dubois as she attempts to deal with the events in her past, and resolve her uncertain future. Dubois’ lamentable romantic history acts to push her on an unremitting path of mental deterioration, which manifests itself in a heavy reliance on alcohol, predation (on younger men), and romantic fantasies—this gradually escalates from the benign and simple act of visualizing a…

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    hysteria is Blanche Dubois; the protagonist of the Southern Gothic novel, A Streetcar Named Desire, composed by Tennessee Williams. It focuses on her recurring psychotic meltdowns as she suffers from the graveyard of her former self. She is an ocean and the sea who becomes…

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    important to be the common person, Amanda Wingfield of The Glass Menagerie and Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar Named Desire value blending into the world around them in order to avoid the pressure from society that brings out their most influential weaknesses. Without anyone to depend on, Blanche Dubois and Amanda Wingfield face more pressure from the environment around them and because of this their vulnerability is highlighted. Blanche from A Streetcar…

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    entire show Blanche DuBois is staying with her sister, Stella. While she is there Blanche becomes more and more deranged, and as the show continues Blanche lies about her life and how she came to stay with her sister. Due to Blanche Dubois’ daft mannerisms, she should be sent to a mental institution. Blanche begins the show lying. She tells Stella how she was on leave from her teaching position due to the strain of losing the family home. When in reality she was sleeping with a student. Blanche…

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    life of Blanche DuBois. The main theme of the dramatic play mostly concerns that of Blanche, and the upmost tragedy. Blanche is seen as a woman stuck in a tragedy and living two identities between two different worlds. Blanche is feigning between the two very different worlds, the one of the past, and the present. She is a lonely and frightened soul, who consoles her life around lies and men to fill her desire and her illusion of a “better life”. Desire continually fills the needs of Blanche, as…

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    Comparing the two characters from the novel The Awakening and the play A Streetcar Named Desire, Edna Pontellier and Blanche Dubois, there are clearly inherent differences between the two. Some differences being: Edna being an artist and Blanche being a teacher, Edna having two children and Blanche having none, Edna being a married women and Blanche being a widow. But, despite the differences the between the two characters there are also many similarities. The three most important similarities…

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    Streetcar Named Desire

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    The idealistic view of pure true love that Blanche harbours is in stark contrast to Stella’s animalistic urges of desire and this underlying theme of love in conflict with desire is present throughout the play. ‘Haven’t you ever ridden that streetcar?’ Stella is freely admitting to being driven purely by desire and such a confession brings to light her dependency on these sexual urges and Stanley in a very unhealthy way. This is portrayed through her amusement and dismissal of Stanley’s violent…

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    In As I Lay Dying, by William Faulkner, Darl was always perceived as mildly insane. He was able to know and understand things that he shouldn’t know. In “A Streetcar Named Desire,” by Tennessee Williams, Stella’s sister Blanche lied throughout the play in order to change the way she was perceived. She was also unable to keep her secrets and painful memories which led to her insanity. In As I Lay Dying and “A Streetcar Named Desire,” both Darl and Blanche’s levels of sanity decreased when they…

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