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The Dangers Of Desire In A Streetcar Named Desire By Tennessee Williams

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“You can disguise any set with lights and shadows” - indeed one can, even with a paper lantern. It simply depends on what type of “set” one has. It could be a scene, a place or even a person, as in the case of A Streetcar Named Desire. Tennessee Williams describes the main character in his play Blanche DuBois, as a woman, desperate to cover her true self. She believes she is a victim of the harsh world that deprived her from love and forced her to succumb to indecent desires. Feeling guilty and filthy, she tries in many ways to cleanse herself from the mistakes of the past, which haunt her in the present. Spending all her time wearing white, being clean, presenting a certain image, Blanche finds herself most comfortable in the dark. Although Blanche …show more content…

Blanche does this subconsciously, always using the excuse that her “nerves are in knots” as she believes so. However, these are futile efforts that vanish at once when the night comes, as darkness is a true part of her and she is in love with the night that allows her to live out a fantasy of being a different person and having a different life: “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 truth, I tell what ought to be truth. And if that is sinful, then let me be damned for it!” Blanche is devoted to the idea of being a Southern belle: angelic, pure, without a single vulgar word coming out of her mouth. At the same time, she hides her alcoholism, claiming that she is “not accustomed to having more than one drink,” disregarding the fact that she takes frequent shots. Lying to everyone that surrounds her and in some way even lying to herself, she continues making fruitless efforts to present the image of an unsullied damsel. And yet, she still tries to wash off her self-disgust in the

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