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- English
- Blanche's psychological breakdown
-
- In Tennesse Williams' play, "A Streetcar Named Desire" the readers are
- introduced to a character named Blanche DuBois. In the plot, Blanche is
- Stella's younger sister who has come to visit Stella and her husband
- Stanley in New Orleans. After their first meeting Stanley develops a
- strong dislike for Blanche and everything associated with her. Among the
- things Stanley dislikes about Blanche are her "spoiled-girl" manners and
- her indirect and quizzical way of conversing. Stanley also believes that
- Blanche has conned him and his wife out of the family mansion. In his
- opinion, she is a good-for-nothing "leech" that has attached itself to
- his household, and is just living off him. Blanche's lifelong habit of
- avoiding unpleasant realities leads to her breakdown as seen in her
- irrational response to death, her dependency, and her inability to
- defend herself from Stanley's attacks.
- BlancheÆs situation with her husband is the key to her later behavior.
- She married rather early at the age of sixteen to whom a boy she
- believed was a perfect gentleman. He was sensitive, understanding, and
- civilized much like herself coming from an aristocratic background. She
- was truly in love with Allen whom she considered perfect in every way.
- Unfortunately for her he was a homosexual. As she caught him one
- evening in their house with an older man, she said nothing, permitting
- her disbelief to build up inside her. Sometime later that evening, while
- the two of them were dancing, she told him what she had seen and how he
- disgusted her. Immediately, he ran off the dance floor and shot himself,
- with the gunshot forever staying in BlancheÆs mind. After that day,
- Blanche believed that she was really at fault for his suicide. She
- became promiscuous, seeking a substitute men (especially young boys),
- for her dead husband, thinking that she failed him sexually. Gradually
- her reputation as a whore built up and everyone in her home town knew
- about her. Even for military personnel at the near-by army base,
- Blanche's house became out-of-bounds. Promiscuity though wasn't the only
- problem she had. Many of the aged family members died and the funeral
- costs had to be covered by Blanche's modest salary. The deaths were
- long, disparaging and horrible on someone like Blanche. She was forced
- to mortgage the mansion, and soon the bank repossessed it. At school,
- where Blanche taught English, she was dismissed because of an incident
- she had with a seventeen-year-old student that reminded her of her late
- husband. Even the management of the hotel Blanche stayed in during her
- final days in Laurel, asked her to leave because of the all the
- different men that had been seeing there. All of this, cumulatively,
- weakened Blanche, turned her into an alcoholic, and lowered her mental
- stability bit-by-bit.
- Her husband's death affects her greatly and determines her behavior
- from then on. Having lost Allan, who meant so much to her, she is
- blinded by the light and from then on never lights anything stronger
- than a dim candle. This behavior is evident when she first comes to
- Stella's and puts a paper lantern over the light bulb. Towards the end,
- when the doctor comes for Blanche and she says she forgot something,
- Stanley hands her her paper lantern. Even Mitch notices that she cannot
- stand the pure light, and therefore refuses to go out with him during
- the daytime or to well lit places. Blanche herself says "I can't stand a
- naked light bulb any more than ...". A hate for bright light isn't the
- only affect on Blanche after Allan's death - she needs to fill her empty
- heart, and so she turns to a lifestyle of one-night-stands with
- strangers. She tries to comfort herself from not being able to satisfy
- Allan, and so Blanche makes an effort to satisfy strangers, thinking
- that they need her and that she can't fail them like she failed Allan.
- At the same time she turns to alcohol to avoid the brutality of death.
- The alcohol seems to ease her through the memories of the night of
- Allan's death. Overtime the memory comes back to her, the musical tune
- from the incident doesn't end in her mind until she has something
- alcoholic to drink. All of these irrational responses to death seem to
- signify how Blanche's mind is unstable, and yet she tries to still be
- the educated, well-mannered, and attractive person that Mitch first sees
- her as. She tries to not let the horridness come out on top of her
- image, wanting in an illusive and magical world instead. The life she
- desires though is not what she has and ends up with.
- Blanche is very dependent coming to Stella from Belle Reve with
- less than a dollar in change. Having been fired at school, she resorts to
- prostitution for finances, and even that does not suffice her. She has
- no choice but to come and live with her sister; Blanche is homeless,
- out of money, and cannot get a job due to her reputation in Laurel.
- Already in New Orleans, once she meets Stanley, Blanche is driven to get
- out of the house. She needs get away from Stanley for she feels that a
- Kowalski and a DuBois cannot coexist in the same household. Her only
- resort to get out, though, is Mitch. She then realizes how much she
- needs Mitch. When asked by Stella, Whether Blanche wants Mitch, Blanche
- answers "I want to rest...breathe quietly again! Yes-I want Mitch...if
- it happens...I can leave here and not be anyone's problem...". This
- demonstrates how dependent she is on Mitch, and consequently Blanche
- tries to get him to marry her. There is though Stanley who stands
- between her and Mitch.
- Stanley is a realist and cannot stand the elusive "dame Blanche",
- eventually destroying her along with her illusions. Blanche cannot
- withstand his attacks. Before her, Stanley's household was exactly how
- he wanted it to be. When Blanche came around and drunk his liquor,
- bathed in his bathtub, and posed a threat to his marriage, he acted like
- a primitive animal that he was, going by the principle of "the survival
- of the fittest". Blanche already weakened by her torturous past did not
- have much of a chance against him. From their first meeting when he
- realized she lied to him about drinking his liquor, he despised her. He
- attacked her fantasies about the rich boyfriend at a time when she was
- most emotionally unstable. He had fact over her word and forced her to
- convince herself that she did not part with Mitch in a friendly manner.
- Further, he went on asking her for the physical telegram to convince him
- that she did receive it. When Blanche was unable to provide it, he
- completely destroyed her fantasies, telling her how she was the
- worthless Queen of the Nile sitting, on her throne and swilling down his
- liquor. This wild rebuttal by Stanley she could not possibly take, just
- as she could not face a naked light bulb. Further when Stanley went on
- to rape her, he completely diminished her mental stability. It was not
- the actual rape that represents the causes for her following madness,
- but the fact that she was raped by a man who represented everything
- unacceptable to her. She couldn't handle being so closely exposed to
- something that she has averted and diluted all of her life - reality,
- realism, and rape by a man who knew her, destroyed her, and in the end
- made her something of his. She could not possibly effectively refute
- against him in front of Stella. Blanche's past and present actions &
- behavior, in the end, even in Stella's eyes depicted her as an insane
- person.
- All of Blanche's troubles with Stanley that in the end left her in a
- mental institution could have been avoided by her. Stanley and she would
- have gotten along better if she would have been frank with him during
- their first encounter. Blanche made a grave mistake by trying to act
- like a lady, or trying to be what she thought a lady ought to be.
- Stanley, being as primitive as he was, would have liked her better if
- she was honest with him about drinking his liquor. Blanche always felt
- she could give herself to strangers, and so she did try to flirt with
- Stanley at first. After all like she said to Stella "Honey, would I be
- here if the man weren't married?", Stanley did catch her eyes at first.
- But being brutally raped by him in the end destroyed her because he was
- not a starnger, he knew her, he made her face reality, and in a way he
- exposed her to the bright luminous light she could not stand all her
- life.
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