Blanche Dubois Jungle

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“A Streetcar Named Desire” captures the early life of American citizens living in the region of New Orleans. Amongst other characters, Blanche Dubois french named American woman, depicts herself from the rest as she arrives at the Elysian Fields where a new life awaits her, a life awakening a hidden deplorable past. A past which Tennessee Williams through the use of various symbols throughout the play, counters Blanche’s fight with her present and past. Blanche is a French word meaning “white”, a colour which refers to purity and innocence, ironic as to Blanche’s character traits. The name suggest that Blanche is a pure and innocent person but it’s “only the illusory image which she tries to create for herself suggests these traits, but her…show more content…
Thus, a link can be made with the jungle and her former life, which Blanche could not find a way out and detect who she really was. “The term jungle appears in the play as well. We find the term jungle in the last scene in the stage directions” which indicate that “The night is filled with inhuman voices like cries in a jungle” which is also a simile which here associates a brutal, wild and animal imagery which foreshadows the…show more content…
This illusion she tries to create of herself can be further seen through her “white satin evening gown” and “rhinestone tiara” we are told she wears in scene ten. Blanche’s dress code highlights the fact that “she clearly demarcates herself from the social environment around her”. The rhinestone has a similar effect which creates the illusion of superiority, glamour and classiness but however happens to be a cheap object. The streetcars Desire and Cemeteries she takes to arrive at the Elysian Fields are symbolic to her character. “They told me to take named Desire, and then transfer to one called Cemeteries and ride six blocks and get off at - Elysian Fields!” are the first few words she says when arriving. The streetcars highlight Blanche’s journey throughout the play from desire to lunacy as “we will see her progress from the “desire” that causes her to lose her job as schoolteacher, to a desire for “rest” to the burial of crossing over to a “paradise” beyond personal
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