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Several elements in A Streetcar Named Desire 欲望号街车电影分析characters Blanche, because of her “inappropriate manner”, she loses her job and leaves her hometown to live with her pregnant sister. She is highly vulnerable and neurotic. She looks Stanley as a rude man and always has conflicts with him. In the end, being raped by Stanley ,she lost her mind and is sent to an insane asylum . Stanley, a bad tempered blue collar ,who is Blanches brother-in-law, devoting himself to alcohol, gambling and desire. He hates Blanche because of her influence on his wife, so he wants to destroy her dignity and pride. He reveals Blanches past and ruins her engagement. Finally, he successfully gets rid of Blanche and sends her to an asylum . Stella, Blanches sister, Stanleys wife, a simple- minded woman who is intrigued to her husband. Like Branche, she is from an upper-class family in the south, but she has a totally different attitude towards love from her sister. Mitch, Stanleys friend, who initially wants to marry Blanche, knowing her past from Stanley, he leaves Branche and coldly insults her which partly leads to her madness.Mofitsrecurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the texts major themes.Light Throughout the play, Blanche avoids appearing in direct, bright light, especially in front of her suitor, Mitch. 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 Blanches past. She is haunted by the ghost of her lost first love, her aim in life, her dignity, and the genteel society of her ancestors. Blanche covers the exposed light bulb 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. 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 Allans suicide, Blanche says, the bright light has been missing. Bathing Throughout the play, Blanche bathes a lot. Her sexual experiences have made her a hysterical woman, but these baths, as she says, calm her nerves. These baths represent her efforts to clean herself of her odious history. Yet, just as she cannot erase the past, her bathing is never done.Drunkenness Both Stanley and Blanche drink excessively at various points during the play. Stanleys drinking is social: he drinks with his friends at the bar. Blanches drinking is anti- social, and she tries to keep it a secret. She drinks on the sly in order to withdraw from harsh reality. For both characters, drinking leads to destructive behavior: Stanley commits domestic violence, and Blanche deludes herself. Yet Stanley is able to rebound from his drunken escapades, whereas alcohol augments Blanches gradual departure from sanity.symbolsobjects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent abstract ideas or conceptsAll of these effects combine to dramatize Blanches final breakdown and departure from reality in the face of Stanleys physical threat. When she loses her sanity in her final struggle against Stanley, Blanche ignore the reality entirely and finally.Shadows and CriesAs Blanche and Stanley begin to quarrel in Scene Ten, various oddly shaped shadows begin to appear on the wall behind her. Discordant noises and jungle cries also occur as Blanche begins to descend into madness.The Varsouviana PolkaBlanche had walked in on Allen in bed with an older male friend. The three of them then went out dancing together, pretending nothing had happened. In the middle of the Varsouviana, Blanche told Allen that he “disgusted” her. He ran away and shot himself dead. The polka music plays at various points in the play, when Blanche is feeling remorse for Allens death. Since then, Blanche hears the polka whenever she panics and loses her grip on reality. “Its Only a Paper Moon” In Scene Seven, Blanche sings this popular ballad while she bathes. The songs lyrics describe the way love turns the world into a “phony” fantasy. The speaker in the song says that if both lovers believe in their imagined reality, then its no longer “make-believe.” These lyrics sum up Blanches approach to life. She believes that her fibbing is only her means of enjoying a better way of life and is therefore essentially harmless.Meat In Scene One, Stanley throws a package of meat at his adoring Stella to catch. The action sends Eunice and the Negro woman into peals of laughter. Presumably, theyve picked up on the sexual innuendo behind Stanleys gesture. In hurling the meat at Stella, Stanley states the sexual proprietorship he holds over her. Stellas delight in catching Stanleys meat signifies her sexual infatuation with him.How come the play is named A Streetcar Named Desir
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