A Streetcar Named Desire Blanche Dubois Essay

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    damaged character of Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar Named Desire is led to her own psychological death due to her tendencies towards idealism. The streetcar that held the name desire promised a future for Blanche, it held empty promises of fulfillment that caused an immense amount of pain in miss Dubois's life. The car took her away from her own life and brought her to her own psychological graveyard hidden behind the promise of a perfect and respectful future. The first stop of desire was a transfer to

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    encompassing their own destruction.” (Gassner 463). Fitting Gassner’s definition of a tragic character, Blanche DuBois in Tennessee William’s A Streetcar Named Desire caustically leads herself to her own downfall. In the beginning of the play, Blanche DuBois, a “belle of the old South” (Krutch 40), finds herself at the footsteps of her sister and brother-in-law’s shabby apartment in New Orleans. Although DuBois portrays herself as a refined and sophisticated woman, the reader soon comes to realize that, hiding

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    or more tragic heroes within them; A Streetcar Named Desire is no exception. According to Dr. Hebert, a tragic hero must meet the following criteria: they “must be Noble, have a tragic flaw such as hubris, they go through a sequence of fall, suffering, learning, and punishment, and there must be an emotional

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    The Tragic Character of Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar Named Desire *No Works Cited To state the obvious, a tragic agent is one that is the subject of a tragic event or happening. In A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche Dubois is this agent. She experiences numerous things, and has certain dynamics that solidify her tragic elements. Many essayists describe these elements and they give clear conceptions of her tragic nature. Aristotle has written of many qualities one must have in order to fit in

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    Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche DuBois fully epitomizes a damsel in distress struggling with the baggage of her past. Having faced rough circumstances, her loneliness leads her into a world of fantasy where she can play the role of a Southern belle, pure and fragile. Unfortunately, masking the true circumstances of her present only works for so long; in the end, she finds herself as the tragic heroine of Williams’ tale, bound to fall from grace. Therefore, in A Streetcar Named Desire the character

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    In Tennesse Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche DuBois goes insane. (AI) Throughout the play Blanche continually lies to everyone including the people she cares for and the people she does not care for. (A2) Blanche tells so many lies that even she has trouble knowing what is true and what is a lie. (A3) Towards the end of the play when Mitch finds out the truth about her, he remarks, “Lies, lies, inside and out, all lies” (119). (A4) When he discovers these lies, he gets frustrated and

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    While watching A Streetcar named Desire, the character of Blanche Dubois at first appeared to be a weak self-absorbed southern woman, when really what started coming from her character was a flawed personality. What is not known is whether this is something that runs in the family, or has only shown itself through Blanche. Since this was during a time when mental illness was not yet studied deeply, the way Blanche is treated while succumbing to her illness and how she was sent off to the mental hospital

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    In A Streetcar Named Desire, Tennessee Williams’ heroine, Blanche Du Bois, plays a leading role in which we see her many sides and how she refuses to accept the modern age. The reader will constantly notice her struggle to keep up a certain appearance, that being a character of pure and delicate femininity. Because of specific examples that Williams gives us, like how Blanche acts when she is alone and then her behavior around men. We see her refusal to be seen in bright light or daylight. These

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    heroine Blanche DuBois appearing in a play A Streetcar Named Desire (1947) written by Tennessee Williams. My intention is to concentrate on the most significant features of her nature and behaviour and also on various external aspects influencing her life and resulting in her nervous breakdown. I would like to discuss many themes related to this character, such as loss, desire and longing for happiness, beauty and youth, pretension, lies and imagination, dependence on men and alcoholism. Blanche DuBois

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    The Unnecessary Decline of Blanche DuBois in A Streetcar Named Desire             Upon reviewing the drama, A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, it would appear that the character of Blanche DuBois is worthy of closer inspection.  With her previous occupation as a teacher of American literature and her former social status being that of a well-bred woman of the very traditional Old South, Blanche could be any human being transferring from one culture to another with customs far

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