Internal and External struggles in A Streetcar Name Desire

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Internal and External struggles in A Streetcar Name Desire

        Tennessee Williams states in the introduction of A Streetcar Named Desire that, “… once you fully apprehend the vacuity of a life without struggle you are equipped with the basic means of salvation”. Streetcar passionately embraces Williams’ words; conflict is what makes this play so human and transcendent. The characters are portrayed as complex individuals with unexpected reactions that in many cases arise from their troubled pasts. The characters' behaviors, particularly Blanche's, come from their fear to be lonely, and manifest themselves externally as the most definitive personality traits in each one of them.

        Blanche projects her own failures into others along the play. For instance, her strong reaction when she sees Stella's living conditions seem to have more to do with her loss of hope of a promising future for herself than with her disapproval of Stella's lifestyle. Bert Cardullo in his essay “Drama of Intimacy and Tragedy of Incomprehension: A Streetcar Named Desire Reconsidered” argues that Stanley is only the means through which Blanche attempts to fights her own battle. Blanche's struggle, according to Cardullo, is about intimacy; she envies the intimacy Stanley and Stella share in their relationship. Cardullo also claims that Blanche mourns the intimacy she did not have with her young deceased husband, and blames herself for not being able to be compassionate to his cry for help. Although Blanche's recriminations are against herself, she does not admit this until latter on in the play. In the fist scene Blanche perceives an accusatory look from Stella when she tells her what happened with Belle Reve, even though Stella does not blame Blanche in any way whatsoever. This scene again portrays Blanche as projecting her feelings of guilt into Stella.

        Another behavior typical of Blanche’s misdirected attempt for intimacy is her compulsive flirtation, which is her way of relating to men. She craves to be protected and admired, but her desire is always unfulfilled; therefore, her flirtation never stops. This is clearly observed right from the moment she meets Stella's husband. “Will Stanley like me, or will I just be a visiting in-law, Stella? I couldn't stand that” Blanche says (23). Her worries make her act in a very seductive manner towards Stanley to gain his admiration. This flirtation does not even stop when Stella appears in the scene, Blanche sends her to the store to buy a Coke. Blanche's hunger for compliments is directed as well to women. Two examples would be when she compares her body with Stella's to receive a compliment, and during the last scene when she calms down after Stella and Eunice agree on how beautiful she looks.

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        Perhaps Blanche's actions are also connected with her attempt to feel emotions similar to young lovers. In doing so, she is able to return emotionally to her adolescent love years with her young husband, perhaps fantasizing about a different ending. According to Cardullo, Blanche’s downfall begins at the moment her husband suddenly leaves her dancing alone in the Casino. Blanche's efforts to relive teenage emotions are evidenced by, her intimate relationship with one of her young students in Laurel, and in the scene where she seduces and kisses a young man in her sister and Stanley's home. Blanche wants to ...

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