Wednesday, March 27, 2019
A Streetcar Named Desire, by Tennessee Williams :: English Literature Essays
A aerial tramway Named DesireIn Tennesse Williams play, A Streetcar Named Desire the readers are introduced to a character named Blanche DuBois. In the plot, Blanche is Stellas younger baby who has come to visit Stella and her husband Stanley in New Orleans. After their first-year meeting Stanley develops a strong dislike for Blanche and everything associated with her. Among the things Stanley dislikes about Blanche are her spoiled-girl readiness and her indirect and quizzical way of conversing. Stanley also believes that Blanche has conned him and his wife out of the family mansion. In his opinion, she is a good-for-nothing leech that has attached itself to his household, and is just living remove him. Blanches lifelong habit of avoiding unpleasant realities leads to her breakdown as seen in her senseless response to death, her dependency, and her inability to defend herself from Stanleys attacks. Blanches situation with her husband is the primal to her later behavior. She mar ried rather early at the age of xvi to whom a boy she believed was a ameliorate gentleman. He was sensitive, understanding, and civilized oft like herself coming from an aristocratic background. She was truly in love with Allen whom she considered perfect in every way. Unfortunately for her he was a homosexual. As she caught him one evening in their house with an older man, she said nothing, permitting her disbelief to strain up inside her. Sometime later that evening, while the two of them were dancing, she told him what she had seen and how he disgusted her. Immediately, he ran off the dance floor and shot himself, with the gunfire forever staying in Blanches mind. After that day, Blanche believed that she was really at pick for his suicide. She became promiscuous, seeking a substitute men (especially young boys), for her dead husband, cerebration that she failed him sexually. Gradually her reputation as a whore built up and everyone in her home town knew about her. Even f or military military force at the near-by army base, Blanches house became out-of-bounds. Promiscuity though wasnt the only worry she had. Many of the aged family members died and the funeral costs had to be covered by Blanches low salary. The deaths were long, disparaging and horrible on someone like Blanche. She was forced to owe the mansion, and soon the bank repossessed it. At school, where Blanche taught English, she was dismissed because of an incident she had with a seventeen-year-old scholarly person that reminded her of her late husband.
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