Summary Of A Streetcar Named Desire By Tennessee Williams

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The human mind is fragile, unpredictable and unreliable. Simultaneously, the human mind is a master of self-defense against emotionally shaking experiences that one might live through. During the first half of the 20th century, mental illness was not a subject widely spoken about and drugs, electro-convulsive therapy, and surgery were used as treatments for persistent illnesses of the mind (PBS “Timeline: Treatments (...)”). This is the world Tennessee Williams grew up in, with a three year older sister who developed a mental illness herself (Hoare). In 1947, Tennessee Williams broke through the barrier of fame with his well known play A Streetcar Named Desire: the story about the emotional demise of the fragile, yet determined, southern belle Blanche DuBois and her visit to her sister Stella in New Orleans. Williams himself said that his plays are “pleas for the understanding of delicate people” (Rocamora): they contain a desperation for sensitivity, tenderness and humaneness that can rarely be found other plays (Maupin). Blanche DuBois is Tennessee Williams’ representation of the “delicate people”, as she battles psychological illness through fear, guilt and compensation for the surrounding people and relations in the play. Blanche DuBois represents the delicacy of the vulnerable mind that Tennessee Williams aimed to portray in his plays, but also his own fear of going insane. Blanche …show more content…

She is constantly trying to compensate her surroundings both through actions and imagining possible ways of being forgiven, to make herself feel better, as her foundation of security lies in this act. However, Blanche is not aware that she wishes to eliminate her guilt, because she is convinced that it is the cross she will have to carry for the rest of her

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