Sunday, October 13, 2019
The Charater of Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire :: Streetcar Named Desire
      The Charater of Blanche in A Streetcar Named Desire                 In 'A Streetcar Named Desire' we focus on three main characters. One of these  characters is a lady called Blanche. As the play progresses, we gradually get to  know more about Blanche and the type of person she really is in contrast to the  type of person that she would like everybody else to think she is. Using four  main mediums, symbolism and imagery, Blanche's action when by herself, Blanche's  past and her dialogue with others such as Mitch, Stanley and the paperboy, we  can draw a number of conclusions about Blanche until the end of Scene Five.  Using the fore mentioned mediums we can deter that Blanche is deceptive,  egotistical and seductive.                  The writer, Tennesse Williams uses symbolism and imagery to help convey the  idea that Blanche is deceptive, egotistical and seductive. We can clearly  discover how deceptive Blanche is by the symbolism that Williams uses throughout  the play. One can note how Blanche continually wears white dresses or a red  kimono when she is being especially flirtatious, so that she makes people think  that she is innocent and pure. In Scene Five Blanche's white dress, a symbol of  purity is stained which is symbolic of the fact that Blanche if far from being  pure. Blanche's world hinges on illusion and deception as can be seen when  Blanche pours her heart out to Stella in scene five, "soft people... have got to  be seductive... make a little - temporary magic". Blanche feels that she must  trick and deceive in order to survive in a world where she is "fading now!" and  her looks are leaving her. We are introduced to Blanche as a "delicate beauty"  that "must avoid strong light". Williams, portr   ays Blanche as an uncertain  character who hides behind the veneer of outer beauty and who when is placed  under the spotlight, fails to live up to the person she would like people to  think that she is. Williams also provides strong imagery of her as a moth, as  she is dressed in white clothes and is fluttering. This imagery of Blanche as a  moth is further emphasised when Blanche herself later states, "put on soft  colours, the colours of butterfly wings and glow".  					    
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