Themes - A Streetcar Named Desire
Fantasy’s Inability to Overcome Reality
Although Williams’s protagonist in A Streetcar Named
Desire is the romantic Blanche DuBois, the play is a work of social realism.
Blanche explains to Mitch that she fibs because she refuses to accept the hand fate has dealt her.
Lying to herself and to others allows her to make life appear as it should be rather than as it is.
Stanley, a practical man firmly grounded in the physical world, disdains
Blanche’s fabrications and does everything he can to unravel them. The
antagonistic relationship between Blanche and Stanley is a struggle between appearances
and reality. It propels the play’s plot and creates an overarching
tension. Ultimately, Blanche’s attempts to remake her own and Stella’s
existences—to rejuvenate her life and to save Stella from a life with
Stanley—fail.
One of the main ways Williams dramatizes fantasy’s inability to overcome
reality is through an exploration of the boundary between exterior and interior. The set of
the play consists of the two-room Kowalski apartment and the surrounding
street. Williams’s use of a flexible set that allows the street to be seen at
the same time as the interior of the home expresses the notion that the home is not a domestic
sanctuary. The Kowalskis’ apartment cannot be a self-defined world that
is impermeable to greater
reality. The characters leave and enter the apartment throughout the
play, often bringing with them the problems they encounter in the larger
environment. For example, Blanche refuses to leave her prejudices against the
working class behind her at the door. The most notable instance of this effect
occurs just before Stanley rapes Blanche, when the back wall of the apartment
becomes transparent to show the struggles occurring on the street, foreshadowing
the violation that is about to take place in the Kowalskis’ home.
Though reality
triumphs over fantasy in A Streetcar Named Desire,Williams
suggests that fantasy is
an important and useful tool. At the end of the play, Blanche’s retreat
into her own private fantasies enables her to partially shield herself from reality’s harsh blows.
Blanche’s insanity emerges as she retreats fully into herself, leaving the
objective world behind in order to avoid accepting reality. In order to escape
fully, however, Blanche must come to perceive the exterior world as that which
she imagines in her head. Thus, objective reality is not an antidote to
Blanche’s fantasy world; rather, Blanche adapts the exterior world to fit her delusions. In both
the physical and the psychological realms, the boundary between fantasy and
reality is permeable. Blanche’s final, deluded happiness suggests that, to some
extent, fantasy is a vital
force at play in every individual’s experience, despite reality’s inevitable
triumph.
The Relationship between Sex
and Death
Blanche’s
fear of death manifests itself in her fears of aging and of lost beauty.
She refuses to tell anyone her true age or to appear in harsh light that will reveal her faded looks. She
seems to believe that by continually asserting her sexuality, especially toward
men younger than herself, she will be able to avoid death and return to the world of teenage bliss she experienced
before her husband’s suicide.
However, beginning in Scene One, Williams suggests that Blanche’s
sexual history is in fact
a cause of her downfall. When she first arrives at the Kowalskis’,
Blanche says she rode a streetcar named Desire, then transferred to a streetcar
named Cemeteries, which brought her to a street named Elysian Fields. This
journey, the precursor to the play, allegorically represents the trajectory of Blanche’s life. The Elysian Fields are the land of
the dead in Greek mythology. Blance's lifelong pursuit of her sexual desires has led to
her eviction from Belle Reve, her ostracism from Laurel, and, at the end of the
play, her expulsion from society at large.
Sex leads
to death for others Blanche knows as well. Throughout the play, Blanche
is haunted by the deaths of her ancestors, which she attributes to their “epic
fornications.” Her husband’s suicide results from her disapproval of his
homosexuality. The message is that indulging one’s desire in the form of unrestrained promiscuity
leads to forced departures and unwanted ends. In Scene Nine, when the
Mexican woman appears selling “flowers for the dead,” Blanche reacts with
horror because the woman
announces Blanche’s fate. Her fall into madness can be read as the
ending brought about by her dual flaws—her inability to act appropriately on her desire and
her desperate fear of
human mortality. Sex and death are intricately and fatally linked in Blanche’s
experience.
Dependence on Men
A Streetcar Named Desire presents a sharp critique of
the way the institutions and attitudes of postwar America placed restrictions on women’s lives. Williams
uses Blanche’s and Stella’s dependence on men to expose and critique the treatment of women
during the transition from the old to the new South. Both Blanche and Stella
see male companions as their
only means to achieve happiness, and they depend on men for both their
sustenance and their self-image. Blanche recognizes that Stella could be
happier without her physically abusive husband, Stanley. Yet, the alternative
Blanche proposes—contacting Shep Huntleigh for financial support—still involves
complete dependence on men. When Stella chooses to remain with Stanley, she
chooses to rely on, love, and believe in a man instead of her sister. Williams
does not necessarily criticize Stella—he makes it quite clear that Stanley
represents a much more secure future than Blanche does.
For herself, Blanche sees marriage to Mitch as her means of
escaping destitution. Men’s exploitation of Blanche’s sexuality has left her
with a poor reputation. This reputation makes Blanche an unattractive marriage
prospect, but, because she is destitute, Blanche sees marriage as her only possibility for
survival. When Mitch rejects Blanche because of Stanley’s gossip about
her reputation, Blanche immediately thinks of another man—the millionaire Shep
Huntleigh—who might rescue her. Because Blanche cannot see around her
dependence on men, she has no
realistic conception of how to rescue herself. Blanche does not realize
that her dependence on men will lead to her downfall rather than her salvation.
By relying on men, Blanche
puts her fate in the hands of others.
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