In a road car called Desire, Blanche Dubois began a whimsical conversation with a conversation with a character like Stella or Stanley. And an avid papers about personal motives keeping moving along here. Various processes to make life die. Blanche often disappoints the way these behavioral behaviors are involved and seems to call her a dual contradictory observer.
In the first few scenes of 'Desire Streetcar', Tennessee Williams showed us a complex woman named Blanche Dubois. In this article I will explore the symbolic meaning of her name. Blanche's name is French, meaning white or fair white. Her surname DuBois is also French, it is translated as "made of wood." This name means that Blanche is a very simple and pure person. When she first appeared in the game, "She was wearing a white suit, fluffy corset, necklace and pearl earrings, white gloves and a hat ..." (Sc.1 p.
In a road car described by Blanche Dubois as a tragic victim "Desire Desert Desire Desert Desire", Tennessee Williams is a "pretty" tragic victim as "Blanche Dubois." Williams accomplishes this by using linguistic, theater orientations, and other dramatic techniques to emphasize the spiritual state of Blanche and her dependence on alcohol and men. These factors accumulate and shape her tragic defects. And it is succumbing to desire. She controlled herself and allowed her to express herself as a drama and a tragedy. When Blanche arrived, she was falling, her fate was sealed, and now she could not look back. The drama provides a life version of a romantic slum street, but it reflects the typical character of New Orleans. The surroundings of Elysian Fields are historically different from the rest of the southern part, blacks and whites are mixed, and various race members are playing poker and ball together. ... Read more
One of the themes of 'desire trams' is cruel, which is related to the property of Stanley's Blanche invasion. As Stanley began throwing all items of Blanche around the apartment, Blanche was a victim. Stanley asked Blanche questions and thought that she sold Belle Live to achieve her luxury lifestyle. An example of such an intrusion is when Stanley says "Why not see it?" (He pushes it through the trunk, roughly opens it and starts opening the compartment). It looks like expensive clothes and jewels. The strange loss of Belle Reve promoted suspicion of Stanley. Stanley is often talking about Napoleonic law. It stipulates that his wife has ownership of her husband. Stanley refers to this kind of repetition that shows his ignorance, as he knows a little about it.