Symbols - A Streetcar Named Desire
Shadows and Cries
As Blanche and Stanley begin to quarrel in Scene Ten, various
oddly shaped shadows begin to appear on the wall behind her. Discordant noises
and jungle cries also occur as Blanche begins to descend into madness. All of
these effects combine to dramatize
Blanche’s final breakdown and departure from reality in the face of
Stanley’s physical threat. When she loses her sanity in her final struggle
against Stanley, Blanche
retreats entirely into her own world. Whereas she originally colors her
perception of reality according to her wishes, at this point in the play she ignores reality altogether.
The Varsouviana Polka
The Varsouviana is the polka tune to which Blanche and her
young husband, Allen Grey, were dancing when she last saw him alive. Earlier that day, she
had walked in on him in
bed with an older male friend. The three of them then went out dancing
together, pretending that nothing had happened. In the middle of the
Varsouviana, Blanche turned to Allen and told him that he “disgusted” her. He
ran away and shot himself
in the head.
The polka
music plays at various points in A Streetcar Named Desire,when
Blanche is feeling remorse
for Allen’s death. The first time we hear it is in Scene One, when
Stanley meets Blanche and asks her about her husband. Its second appearance
occurs when Blanche tells Mitch the story of Allen Grey. From this point on,
the polka plays increasingly often, and it always drives Blanche to distraction. She tells Mitch
that it ends only after she hears the sound of a gunshot in her head.
The polka and the moment it evokes represent Blanche’s loss of innocence. The suicide of the young husband Blanche loved dearly was the event that triggered her mental decline.
Since then, Blanche hears the Varsouviana whenever she panics and loses her grip on reality.
“It’s Only a Paper Moon”
In Scene Seven, Blanche sings this popular ballad while she bathes. The song’s
lyrics describe the way
love turns the world into a “phony” fantasy. The speaker in the song
says that if both lovers
believe in their imagined reality, then it’s no longer “make-believe.”
These lyrics sum up
Blanche’s approach to life. She believes that her fibbing is only her
means of enjoying a better way of life and is therefore essentially harmless.
As Blanche sits in the tub singing “It’s Only a Paper Moon,”
Stanley tells Stella the details of Blanche’s sexually corrupt past. Williams
ironically juxtaposes Blanche’s fantastical understanding of herself with
Stanley’s description of Blanche’s real nature. In reality, Blanche is a sham who
feigns propriety and sexual modesty. Once Mitch learns the truth about Blanche,
he can no longer believe in Blanche’s tricks and lies.
Meat
In Scene One, Stanley throws a package of meat at his adoring Stella for
her to catch. The action sends Eunice and the Negro woman into peals of
laughter. Presumably, they’ve picked up on the sexual innuendo behind Stanley’s gesture. In
hurling the meat at Stella, Stanley states the sexual proprietorship he holds over her. Stella’s
delight in catching Stanley’s meat signifies her sexual infatuation with him.
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