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A Streetcar Named Desire Character Analysis

1459 Words6 Pages
The play A Streetcar Named Desire written by Tennessee Williams is a very dynamic and vibrant play in which has a lot of excitement and clamour as tension builds up through the music, use of violence, stage directions, contrast of characters and even through madness. Vulnerability in this play is present in almost every character as society imposes stereotypical aspects on every one of them including Stanley, that has to be the traditional controlling and dominant male, Stella the traditional, obedient house-wife and Blanche is clearly not accepted due to her promiscuousity- and the time period doen 't help her either. This vulnerability highlights the theme of appearance vs reality since the image that everyone tries to portray in which society has imposed on them is not who they really are since Stanley looses control and becomes monstrous due to his alcoholism and when his masculinity is threatened, hence uses violence, while Blanche doesn 't deliver the image of the stereotypical submissive woman society claims she should be as she has a very unstable mind- seen through the Varsouviana and alcoholism she ineffectively tries to hide. Stanley is the stereotypical, dominant man that always gets his way, is in full control of his household and can get away with everything, including with the rape of Blanche in which Stella, the submissive silent wife that she is supposed to be, silently accepts and ignores. Stanley is a character full of pride and dignity that is expected
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