Symbols In A Streetcar Named Desire

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The symbolic meaning of places and their names is not exposed immediately, but their importance is made known throughout the play. In scene one, Blanche recaps her travels on “a street-car named Desire, and then transfer to one called Cemeteries and ride six blacks and get off at – Elysian Fields!” (95). Her journey through New Orleans is symbolic of her journey in life. It was Blanche’s desires that led to the trouble in her life. After the death of her husband Blanche “had many intimacies with strangers…to fill [her] empty heart with” (144). Blanche, struggling with the loss of her husband, filled her life with meaningless sex, and she became obsessed with her desires. She moved onto Cemeteries next, a clear symbol of death. Blanche giving …show more content…

Blanche’s avoidance of light is made known in scene one when she demands that Stella “turn that over-light off! I won’t be looked at in this merciless glare!” (96). This reaction is because Blanche feels the need to hide her true self as well as her aged appearance which lacks beauty. In hiding from the light, Blanche can escape the reality of her less than pleasing appearance and true age. In the third scene, Blanche covers the light with a “little colored paper lantern” because she “can’t stand a naked light bulb, any more than [she] can a rude remark or vulgar action” (114). Her comment shows that she prefers pleasantries and false, polite words to reality and the truth. But like the lantern, Blanche’s illusions are fragile as paper, and they could rip or fall apart at any time. In Blanche’s past, light was representative of love. After the suicide of the man she had married, Blanche said, “the search-light which had been turned on the world was turned off again” (133). For Blanche, light was the love she had for husband, and without her love there was to be no light. His suicide stole her light or love, and thus she is constantly trying to escape the light and consequently

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