Motifs - A Streetcar Named Desire
Light
Throughout the play, Blanche avoids appearing in direct, bright light,
especially in front of her suitor, Mitch. She also refuses to reveal her age, and it is clear
that she avoids light in
order to prevent him from seeing the reality of her fading beauty. In
general, light also symbolizes the reality of Blanche’s past. She is haunted by the ghosts of
what she has lost—her first love, her purpose in life, her dignity, and the
genteel society (real or imagined) of her ancestors.
Blanche covers
the exposed lightbulb in the Kowalski apartment with a Chinese paper
lantern, and she refuses to go on dates with Mitch during the daytime or to
well-lit locations. Mitch points out Blanche’s avoidance of light in Scene
Nine, when he confronts her with the stories Stanley has told him of her past.
Mitch then forces Blanche to stand under the direct light. When he tells her
that he doesn’t mind her age, just her deceitfulness, Blanche responds by
saying that she doesn’t mean any harm. She believes that magic, rather than reality, represents
life as it ought to be. Blanche’s inability to tolerate light means that her grasp on reality is
also nearing its end.
In Scene Six, Blanche tells Mitch that being in love with her
husband, Allan Grey, was like having the world revealed in bright, vivid light. Since Allan’s
suicide, Blanche says, the
bright light has been missing. Through all of Blanche’s inconsequential
sexual affairs with other men, she has experienced only dim light. Bright light, therefore,
represents Blanche’s youthful sexual innocence, while poor light represents her
sexual maturity and disillusionment.
Bathing
Throughout A Streetcar Named Desire, Blanche
bathes herself. Her sexual experiences have made her a hysterical woman, but
these baths, as she says, calm
her nerves. In light of her efforts to forget and shed her illicit past
in the new community of New Orleans, these baths represent her efforts to cleanse herself of her odious
history. Yet, just as she cannot erase the past, her bathing is never
done. Stanley also turns to water to undo a misdeed when he showers after beating Stella. The shower
serves to soothe his
violent temper; afterward, he leaves the bathroom feeling remorseful and
calls out longingly for his wife.
Drunkenness
Both Stanley and Blanche drink excessively at various points
during the play. Stanley’s
drinking is social: he drinks with his friends at the bar, during their
poker games, and to celebrate the birth of his child. Blanche’s drinking, on the other hand, is
anti-social, and she tries to keep it a secret. She drinks on the sly in order to withdraw from harsh reality.
A state of drunken stupor enables
her to take a flight of imagination, such as concocting a getaway with
Shep Huntleigh. For both characters, drinking leads to destructive behavior: Stanley commits domestic
violence, and Blanche deludes herself. Yet Stanley is able to rebound from his drunken
escapades, whereas alcohol augments Blanche's gradual departure from sanity.
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