Blanche of Lancaster

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    One theme that constantly appears in A Streetcar Named Desire is a contrast between the reality and fantasy of love. This dichotomy is represented by Blanche and her grasp on life. Blanche attempts to supplement the hard times in her life by creating fantasies where everything is going her way. While playing cards with Stanley, she states, “I know I fib a good deal. After all, a woman's charm is fifty percent illusion” (WIlliams 36), proving that she likes to fabricate the world around her. When…

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    why it is happening and how it is happening. In A Streetcar Named Desire Blanche visits her sister, Stella, and her husband, Stanley, out in New Orleans to escape from her life in Mississippi. During her stay we find that Stella and Stanley do not have a very healthy relationship. We also find that Blanche is not well and she had not made the best of choices in her past. This story focuses on the characters Stella and Blanche, sisters who grew up on the Belle Reve estate in Mississippi, Stanley,…

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    What Is Blanche A Villain

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    Moreover, Blanche Ingram is portrayed as being a villain. Among the entirety of the novel, Blanche’s morals were far off from what’s considered to be just. She pretends to love Edward Rochester and embarks on a journey of total deceit. When it was falsely speculated that Rochester lost all his money and was no longer wealthy, Blanche’s interest towards him fell faster than anyone could “I told you so.” Thus, proving that Blanche was only captivated by the wealth and status of Rochester. Without…

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    vs. Reality along with developing the main character Blanche. Blanche escapes reality by never showing her true self in the light. Blanche is not just hiding from the people and society, but from her own self. She covers up the truth with lies and exaggerations because she does not want to face reality. Blanche plays dress up similar to what little girls do. It seems as though she is convincing herself that she is younger than the age Blanche actually is. “Now she is placing the rhinestone…

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    Desire starts with Blanche arriving at her sisters, Stella’s apartment in New Orleans. She had arrived with all her belongs and some bad news. She had lost the Belle Reve, which was their families’ mansion. When Stanley and Blanche meet, it’s an automatic unsettling relationship between the two. Stanley thinks that she cheated Stella with the share of Bella Reve. Their relationship gets worse when Stanley gets too drunk while playing poker and beats Stella. This same night, Blanche meet Mitch.…

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    power in the friendship. When he go out with his friend or play poker, he is longing to be in the center of group, which make him to feel that he is superior to the others. However, Blanche attempted to steal attention from him and her destruction turned into a big threat to Stanly. After Blanche and Stella came home, Blanche purposely turn the light on and start getting change. Also she turns on her music when Stanley just wants to focus on his hands of card. She uses her sexuality to attract…

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    In A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams makes it so the notions of brutal desire and death dance together in a vicious waltz around Blanche DuBois, the tragic main character of the play. The pair constantly haunts her from the moment she arrives in Elysian Fields in the form of two streetcars, Desire and Cemeteries, representing her inevitable downfall that stems from her unyielding wishes for intimacy and to fit into society, both created from terrible past experiences. Blanche’s…

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    one of his later plays, A Streetcar Named Desire. In like manner to The Glass Menagerie’s Laura, Blanche DuBois remains a prisoner of her own mind as she too cannot let go of her haunting past. Towards the middle of the book, readers learn of the main experience that causes Blanche’s problems when interacting with men. Her ex-husband, Allan Gray, commits suicide after being called disgusting by Blanche as a result from seeing him with another man. This underlying guilt instills itself deep…

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    Historical Stage Play

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    I aim to create a historically accurate stage play telling the stories of women and African Americans living in early twentieth century New Orleans. During this time a civil war raged throughout New Orleans as vice laws attempted to contain the city’s underworld activities to a single red light district known as Storyville. With the growing number of Jim Crow laws and with the women’s suffrage movement in full effect the city’s moral reformers attempted to repress the rights of African Americans…

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    Throughout the play, we see the contrast between Blanche’s desire to live in her fantasy world and her reality. In scene nine of the play Blanche states, “I don’t want realism. I want magic! (Mitch laughs) Yes, yes, magic! I try to give that to people. I misrepresent things to them. I don’t tell the truth, I tell what ought to be truth” (Williams, 145). In this quote, Blanche’s desire for her…

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