scene 1 Flashcards

1
Q

stage directions:

‘elysian fields’

A

land of the dead in greek mythology where heroes went to die

ironic - blanche is not a hero

he street name is both a literal street in new orleans and a symbolic resting place - foreshadows blanche’s looming fate.

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2
Q

stage directions:

‘he heaves the package at her. she cries out in protest but manages to catch it: then she laughs breathlessly’

A

stanley is the breadwinner of the family

reflects his animalistic nature which stella has adapted to - his masculinity excites her

display gender roles expected of them at the time

stanley does not care much about the needs of stella; he cares only for himself and his image with his friends and so he treats stella as if she is an asset that he has gained in order to make his friends idolize him or be impressed.

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3
Q

stage directions:

‘shocked disbelief’

A

class difference

classes were heavily segregated - never seen a working class environment before

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4
Q

stage directions:

‘white suit with a fluffy bodice and earrings of pearl, white gloves and hat, looking as it she were arriving at a summer tea or cocktail party’

A

white - symbolises innocence and purity, ironic

out of place in elysian fields - part of the upper class , she is a stranger to this type of setting as opposed to her sister

there is a lack of colour, as blanche is simply wearing white.
conveys the idea that the upper class is declining, as it lacks the vivacity of the working class, which williams believes will replace the upper class as the new driving force in america.

exploring the idea of the “white suit” can be linked up to the mid-nineteenth century play la dame aux camélias (1848), where a fallen woman (the play’s protagonist) wears a “white camelias” when she is available to her lovers - blanche appears to be drawn into prostitution

moral chastity

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5
Q

blanche:

‘they told me to take a streetcar named desire, and then transfer to one called cemeteries and ride six blocks and get off at - elysian fields’

A

sexual promiscuity was considered evil and morally wrong.

symbolises death and sex - death of morals

intense desire leads to death and decay

500,000 cases of std’s every year

williams critical of the heteropatriarchy

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6
Q

stage directions:

‘suggests a moth’

A

attracted to light - kills them

avoids attention yet secretly wants it

her fate lies in self-destruction

death and darkness is closely related to moths

symbol of change

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7
Q

stage directions:

‘she pours half a tumbler of whisky and tosses it down. she carefully replaces the bottle and washes out the tumbler at the sink’

A

alcohol addiction

secretive - ruin her image

in private she leisurely drinks however in public, her tendency to drink a lot is scraped from her image

disregards stereotypes

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8
Q

blanche:

‘i’ve got to keep hold of myself’

A

reminding herself of her status within society - upper class, must be polite and ‘ladylike’, in a way she sticks to the stereotypes that were present around rich women and reflects stanley in the way that she thinks and incorporates the stereotypes of society into her character.

that it is ‘out of character’ for her to act that way as she comes from a very prestige society as opposed to stella.

anxious

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9
Q

stella:

you haven’t given me a chance to, honey!’

A

over dominant - symbol of class system

self obsessed

stella is feeling embarrassed about the place she’s living in and maybe she wants to make blanche feel more welcome in the house.

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10
Q

blanche:

‘you must have some liquor on the place! where could it be, i wonder? oh, i spy, i spy!`

A

alcoholic

ironic

williams suffered from the negative externalities of alcohol abuse from his father as a child, and so this is a sensitive topic for him, beginning of play, we see how blanche pursues her urges and uses it as an escape which is one of her factors in leading to her downfall.

alcoholism undermines the purity she tries to put across. the fact that her first lie is about drinking is incredibly important, as it establishes the idea that blanche is ashamed of her mental distress.

this internal demonisation of her own coping mechanisms, reflect her adherence to a strict idea of what a woman should be, which has been ingrained in her by a bourgeoisie upbringing.

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11
Q

blanche:

‘never, never, never in my worst dreams could I picture - only poe! only mr edgar allan poe! - could do it justice! out there I suppose is the ghoul-haunted woodland of weir!

A

reference to poe’s poem ulalume in which the protagonist visits their dead lovers grave - suggests that blanche is describing stella’s home as a tomb - humanity prone to sin and self destruction

blanche thinks her place is horrible, especially because she is used to living in a colonial home in belle reve.

gothic literature

subconscious allusion to her past, as the audience goes on to learn of her own lost love

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12
Q

stella:

‘aren’t you being a little intense about it? it’s not that bad at all!’

A

scared to offend blanche

stella has adapted and moved on

new south

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13
Q

blanche:

‘you’re all I’ve got in the world, and you’re not glad to see me!

A
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14
Q

blanche:

‘you haven’t said a word about my appearance’

A

typical southern belle - beauty is part of identity

moth like tendencies

scared of losing her beauty - old south

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15
Q

blanche:

‘god love you for a liar! daylight never exposed so total a ruin! but you–you’ve put on some weight, yes, you’re just as plump as a little partridge!’

A

being hypocritical - always hiding things

motif of light - blanche’s view of the power/ role of light to ‘expose’ ‘ruin’, justifying her avoidance of it throughout the play

foreshadowing

women expected to be pretty

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16
Q

blanche:

‘you messy child, you, you’ve spilt something on that pretty white lace collar’

A

infantilising stella

projecting her insecurities onto her younger sister because she can’t bring herself to face them on her own self.

purity is stained

17
Q

stella:

‘yes. a different species’

A

machismo male

extremely degrading from stella especially considering she’s talking about her own husband, the person she loves.

could be foreshadowing how blanche finds stanley animalistic

love blinds stella to the social differences between herself and her husband - doesn’t see the compatibility issues that blanche does.

18
Q

stella:

‘i can hardly bear it when he is away for a night’

A

relationship is dependent on sex

worrying to herself

19
Q

blanche:

‘i stayed at belle reve and tried to hold hold it together’

A

clinging onto the past - old south

tennessee emphasizes on the importance of keeping up with the world, or else one will be alienated and lose oneself among the incoherence of the new world

trying to act like the hero

20
Q

‘blanche:

the long parade to the graveyard! father, mother! margaret, that dreadful way! so big with it, it couldn’t be put in a coffin!’

A

semantic field of death

end of the old south

responsibility of a southern belle without the benefits

21
Q

stage directions:

‘he sizes women up at a glance, with sexual classifications, crude images flashing into his mind’

A

anarchic sexual energy

symbolises the new south

this will reflect the way in which he reacts to blanche.

22
Q

stage directions:

‘the music of the polka rises up, faint in the distance’

A

symbol of past trauma

increase of urgency in the music that increases gradually throughout the play also represents the gradual decline of her stability

unable to escape the past