a streetcar named desire

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A Streetcar Named Desire LECTURE 3 } {

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{. }. A Streetcar Named Desire. LECTURE 3. { Introduction to men }. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A  Streetcar Named Desire

A Streetcar Named Desire

LECTURE 3

}{

Page 2: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

men}• [Two men come round the comer, Stanley Kowalski and Mitch. They are about twenty-eight or thirty years old, roughly dressed in blue denim work clothes. Stanley carries his bowling jacket and a red-stained package from a butcher's.]

Construction of Identity, Gender

Page 3: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stanley Kowalski}Age: 25Origin: Polish DescentMarital Status: MarriedOccupation: Factory WorkerHobbies: Bowling, Poker, Drinking

Page 4: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

Stanley}Stanley [bellowing]: Hey, there! Stella, Baby!

Page 5: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

Stanley}More laughter and shouts of parting come from the men. Stanley throws the screen door of the kitchen open and comes in. He is of medium height, about five feet eight or nine, and strongly, compactly built. Animal joy in his being is implicit in all his movements and attitudes. Since earliest manhood the centre of his life has been pleasure with women, the giving and taking of it, not with weak indulgence, dependently, but with the power and pride of a richly feathered male bird among hens. Branching out from this complete and satisfying centre are all the auxiliary channels of his life, such as his heartiness with men, his appreciation of rough humour, his love of good drink and food and games, his car, his radio, everything that is his, that bears his emblem of the gaudy seed-bearer. He saw women up at a glance, with sexual classifications, crude images flashing into his mind and determining the way he smiles at them.

Page 6: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stella Kowalski}Symbolic Meaning: StarAge: 25Hometown: Laurel, MississippiMarital Status: MarriedOccupation: Housewife

Page 7: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

Stella}• Stars - the light which breaks through the darkness. • Light - opposite of darkness, symbol for high ideals or goals

set too high • Stella represents Blanche’s ideal concerning the fact that

she is leading a contented life.• Stella’s position in play: light, hope and stability.• Stabilising element of the play - negotiator between the two

so very different characters.• Ironic – stability is not sustained and does nothing but

witness her sister’s tragic end

Page 8: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

Stella}[Stella comes out on the first-floor landing, a gentle young woman, about twenty-five, and of a background obviously quite different from her husband's.]

Stella [mildly]: Don't holler at me like that. Hi, Mitch.

Page 9: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

Stella}• Contrasts have been set up within the first five minutes of the

play. • Contrast will be extended throughout the play – character,

gentility, colours, etc• Stella subtly attempts to assert herself – this assertion

appears to intensify with the arrival of Blanche, much to the annoyance of Stanley.

• Blanche is a threat to Stanley’s overt masculinity

Page 10: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

S+S}[He heaves the package at her. She cries out in protest but manages to catch it: then she laughs breathlessly. Her husband and his companion have already started back around the corner.]

Page 11: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

S+S}• What is significant about the dramatic action

here?• Heaving – suggests some sort of aggression,

weight• Traditional gender roles constructed here• Hunter/Gatherer; Provider/Nurturer dichotomy

set up

Page 12: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

S+S}Stella [calling after him}: Stanley! Where are you going?Stanley: Bowling!Stella: Can I come watch?Stanley: Come on. [He goes out.] (p4)

---Eunice: Well, that’s where she’s at, watchin’ her husband bowl. (p5)

Page 13: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Introduction to

S+S}• Games – construction of gendered spaces. • Stella is not invited and plays the role of the observer. • Similar to the poker games, bowling is also a sport that the

women are excluded from.

Page 14: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stanley+Stella}- Gender dynamics in post-war

America presented in play- Power dynamics in marital

relationships- Stanley’s position threatened

Page 15: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Blanche DuBois}Age: 30Hometown: Laurel, MississippiMarital Status: Widow (married at 16)Occupation: English School TeacherTraits: Averse to lightPast:Shady

Page 16: A  Streetcar Named Desire

• Blanche – White/Fair• DuBois – French origin, made of wood• Blanche’s entire name is heavily symbolic - it

reflects her true nature in a very clear way. • Blanche’s character is revealed in the same

way in order of her first and last name.• Appearance/Reality: Even though she

initially appears to be innocent and pure, her past and true nature reveals itself as the play progresses.

{Blanche DuBois}

Page 17: A  Streetcar Named Desire

- Scene 1: development of Blanche’s character

- Blanche:- Aware of social distinctions [note

interaction with Eunice and neighbour’s acts]

- Vanity, need of flattery- Pathos: fear of ageing, vulnerability

{Blanche DuBois}

Page 18: A  Streetcar Named Desire

Awareness of social distinctions:-Monosyllybalic responses to Eunice and the Negro womanBlanche [wanting to get rid of her]

Awareness of Stella’s apparent social regression:Eunice [defensively, noticing Blanche’s look]: It’s sort of messed up right now but when it’s clean it’s real sweet.Blanche: Is it?

{Blanche DuBois}

Page 19: A  Streetcar Named Desire

“There is something about her uncertain manner, as well as her white clothes, that suggests a moth” •Moth:

– creature of the night, – averse to light, – lacks colours– symbolic of her living in the dark, living in

ignorance and denial

{Blanche DuBois}

Page 20: A  Streetcar Named Desire

Blanche [with faintly hysterical humour]: 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!

{Blanche DuBois}

Page 21: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Blanche DuBois}• Has a tendency for hysterics and histrionic

outbursts that has to be moderated by Stella• Given her literary background, her sense of

humour may indicate an awareness of the irony in her own literal journey

Page 22: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Contrast in Setting}

LAURELBelle Reve• Laurel is a real town in

southeastern Mississippi

• Had a genteel, aristocratic Old South culture that was fast disappearing in the face of industrialisation

NEW ORLEANSFrench Quarter• Industrialised and urban• A shabby part of the

neighbourhood situated near railway tracks – evidence of rapid industrialisation and expansion of cities

• A conglomeration of cultures and migrants

Page 23: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Contrast in Setting}LAUREL

Belle ReveNEW ORLEANSFrench Quarter

Page 24: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Displacement}• Blanche’s displacement from Laurel to New Orleans

makes her an outsider in Stanley’s and Stella’s world• Blanche: symbol of the plantation era which must

inevitable bow to industrialization and newly confident “ethnic” adversaries – embodied in the Polish Kowalski

• Additionally, Williams exposes a patriarchal society in which women ceased to be valued once they lost their physical attractiveness or failed to conform to social and generally sexist mores

Page 25: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Elysian Fields}• Irony:– Literally means the Greek paradise – But here, it is no ethereal heaven, but

a noisy, active place filled with vital, lusty, ‘macho’ life

Page 26: A  Streetcar Named Desire

Blanche [with faintly hysterical humour]: 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!

Blanche: What you are talking about is brutal desire—just—Desire! The name of that rattle-trap street-car that bangs through the Quarter, up one old narrow street and down another…Stella: Haven’t you ever ridden on that street-car?Blanche: It brought me here. (4.104-106)

{Streetcars Significance}

Page 27: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Streetcars}

Page 28: A  Streetcar Named Desire

There is an actual streetcar named “Desire” that Blanche takes on her way to the Kowalskis’. -Blanche is literally brought to the Kowalski place by “Desire,” but she is also brought there by desire-Desire > Cemeteries > Elysian Fields. -Sex, death, the afterlife? -A linear progression? Desire leading to destruction?

{Streetcars Significance}

Page 29: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stanley + Blanche}Scene 1:•Two individuals from different societies and cultures who are set in sharp contrast•Blanche: a refined woman from an southern aristocratic background, •Stanley: a down-to-earth working man with crude manners, animal-like qualities•Inability to empathise with each other set from the start

Page 30: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stanley + Blanche}Scene 1:•Blanche: represents the dying aristocratic culture, an upper class that threatens Stanley’s role as patriarchal head•Stanley: embodies a crude, lower class which threatens her class superiority•Essentially, in conflict with each other on almost every level•Yet, there is a certain baser, animal attraction between each other•Predator/Prey model would work, but is also complex

Page 31: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Scene 1}• Scene introduces two of the prominent themes of

the play, sex and death. • Stella and Stanley – basis of love is sexual passion. • Stanley - “male chauvinist” ? BUT they are happy

in their own way, bound together by physical love. • Blanche’s longest speech in this scene – death;

note of morbidity continues throughout the play; excessive use of imagery of death in her speech

Page 32: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Scene 1}• Important symbolic and visual elements in the

opening scenes• Stanley – undressing: signifying his elemental,

animal-like strength and virility• Blanche - bathing: a symbol of her attempts to

wash away her past and project image of being beautiful and refined [in scene 2]

• Appearance/Reality; Illusion/TruthNOTE: However, she is associated with the sound of

cats, undermining her attempts to present herself in this way

Page 33: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stanley+ Blanche}Stanley• Aristocratic Old

South• White, Light, Purity• Airy• Feminine

Blanche• New Industrial Age• Dark (but realistic)• Masculine• Solid

Page 34: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Stella + Blanche}• Blanche resents Stella:

– “In bed with a Polack”– A double insult:

• Insinuates Stella’s sexual appetite• Disdain for a Southern aristocrat for a vulgar immigrant

• Stella’s defence of Stanley:– “That’s enough!”– She passively listens to Blanche’s attack but jumps to

Stanley’s defence

Page 35: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{SCENE 1 dramatic

function}Opening Scene•Sets tone, mood and atmosphere•Contextualises play through setting•Introduces main protagonist and antagonist•Constructs contrasts and conflicts •Primes the audience by introducing key concerns and issues..all of which contribute to the audience’s understanding of the rest of the play

Page 36: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{SCENE 1 dramatic

function}Blanche: “Well, I never had your beautiful self-control.”•Scene 1: Sets up contrasts between all three characters•Blanche: self-confesses that she lacks some form of control and discipline over herself

– Truth? Or her guilt at her inability in being able enough to manage family property

Page 37: A  Streetcar Named Desire

Scene 2}{- Revelations: - Loss of Belle Reve- Stella’s pregnancy

- Stanley’s antagonism towards Blanche increases- Laying ground for the

motive behind Blanche’s tragic end

Page 38: A  Streetcar Named Desire

Scene 2}{- Structure: 2 parts- 1. Stella and Stanley- 2. Blanche and Stanley

- Foundation for later conflicts is set

- New motif: Bathing- Extended in the course of

the play- Repetitive and intrusive- Symbolic of Blanche’s

attempt to purify herself from guilt and her sexual history

Page 39: A  Streetcar Named Desire

Scene 2}{- Further construction of a patriarchal society- Napoleanic Code

- Class antagonism- Central conflict:

- Blanche’s unrealistic view of the world and Stanley’s realistic one

Page 40: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Scene 2 - Setting}It is six o’clock the following evening. BLANCHE is bathing. STELLA is completing her toilette. BLANCHE’S dress, a flowered print, is laid out on STELLA’s bed.”

CONTRAST

[STANLEY enters the kitchen from outside, leaving the door open on the perpetual ‘blue piano’ around the corner.]

Note: Use of spaces and props important in understanding themes and concerns.

Page 41: A  Streetcar Named Desire

{Scene 2 - Blanche}Stella: And admire her dress and tell her she’s looking wonderful. That’s important with Blanche. Her little weakness!

QN: What is Blanche’s weakness/flaw?-Obsessive nature-Preoccupation with her youth and her appearance