A Streetcar Named Desire - Final Essay Lorena Betancourt
A Streetcar Named Desire - Final Essay Lorena Betancourt
A Streetcar Named Desire - Final Essay Lorena Betancourt
Blanche Du Bois
Throughout history, human beings have suffered changes that directly depend on
their individual and social life. These changes have always been reflected in
literature, which is why various literary movements have emerged and deeply
reflect the social phenomena that people go through depending on the context and
the place they are in. One of these movements is Romanticism, which is divided
into several genres among which we find Gothic. This one has been mostly
portrayed by the southern region of the United States and is known as Southern
Gothic; whose greater exponent was the Pulitzer Prize winner Tennessee Williams
with his most recognized play A streetcar named desire (1947). I strongly believe
this fascinating play represents Southern Gothic literature due to the exposition of
throughout her family and social pressures and her fantasy’s inability to overcome
reality.
First, Blanche’s complex life represents the social decline of Southern Gothic
because it is a consequence of the family and social pressures of the time. In the
play, Williams (2004) recounts an idyllic past in which Blanche and her entire family
belonged to the upper class and owned the Belle Rêve plantation in Laurel,
Mississippi. Blanche’s whole life seemed perfect: her marriage, her job and her
inheritance. However, her family life is destroyed when her relatives mismanage
the family’s fortune on pleasures and become bankrupt, so she is forced to move
to New Orleans. Thus, Blanche experiences a social decline, as she goes through
the social classes struggle, loses her economic position and her reputation is
deeply affected due to her homosexual husband’s suicide. Evidently, it was those
that led Blanche to a shattered life and vain wish to live in her idyllic past that she
her family and social failure. From everything that occurred, Blanche suffers some
overcome reality. Blanche refuses to accept her failed Destiny, her lower social
class and all her loses. For this reason, she invents and believes her own lies,
creates a fantastic world in which everything is better than in reality and in which
she can prove her superiority. She is not capable to overcome her own tragedy.
“I can smell the sea air. The rest of my time I’m going to spend on the sea.
And when I die, I’m going to die on the sea. You know what I shall die of? I
shall die of eating an unwashed grape one day in the ocean. I will die with
my hand in the hand of some nice-looking ship’s doctor, a very young one
with a small blond mustache and a big silver watch”. (Williams, 2004).
Clearly, Blanche decides to leave the objective world and as seen in this scene,
Blanche refuses the fate that life and society had really given her and turns into
a very clear way the main characteristic of the Southern Gothic literature that
showed the issues of a decadent society. Blanche’s life is a tragedy that shows
how the society of the time exerted big pressures that brought her to the edge of
fantasy was the only solution to all her family and social failures. As a result of the
loss of her family inheritance due to her relative’s mismanagement, her reputation
and her upper social class, Blanche’s life went from a marvel to a complete failure,
to facing economic scarcity and finding her liberation in the tension between
realistic and supernatural elements: fantasy. All of this was a consequence of the
masterpiece.
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