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A Streetcar Named Desire: An Analysis

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I wonder if the foreclosure of Belle Reve, in Tennessee Williams’s play, A Streetcar Named Desire, causes Blanche to create the illusion that surrounds her and her relationships. Blanche's sought-after relations with men could be a coping mechanism she uses to help with the loss of her beloved home. On the other hand, after the loss of Belle Reve Blanche seeks to find a suitor to save her from living a poverty stricken and uncertain existence. However, the problems that arise from the painstaking reality of her fading beauty cause her to create a false reality in which she uses lies to deceive her future suitors. Evidence suggests that the latter suits Blanche’s intentions the best. Therefore, Blanche purses relationships with men to satisfy her needs. Blanche only has herself to rely on after her loss of Belle Reve. Blanche states, “I haven’t been so good the last two years or so, after Belle Reve had started to slip through my fingers. I was never hard or self-sufficient enough.” Blanche’s statement concludes that the circumstance of losing Belle Reve results in her behaving promiscuously in order to woo men into marrying her. Her motive for this …show more content…

For instance, Blanche states that she has not been reputable in the past few years. This horrid reputation arises from her trying to fulfill her needs. Blanche precedes to blame her misfortune on herself by saying she not self-reliant. She is then struck with the notion that she must deceive the people around her and distance herself away from them. However, Blanche slowly becomes more obsessed with her fading attractiveness, and her need to satisfy her illusion. For example, she declares that her attractiveness is fading and is uncertain how she will continue her trickery. From this passage, Blanche’s scattered thought processes suggest she is becoming overwhelmed with reality, and that she must detach herself to achieve

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