Saturday, October 12, 2019
Illusions in Tennessee Williams A Streetcar Named Desire :: Streetcar Named Desire
     Illusions in A Streetcar Named Desire                 In Tennessee Williams' play, A Streetcar Named Desire, there are many    examples where the characters are using illusions in an attempt to escape     reality.                 The best example is found by looking to the main character.    Blanche Dubois was a troubled woman who throughout the play lives her life    in illusions. The story begins with Blanche going to New Orleans to stay    with her sister Stella, and her husband Stanley for a while.  Here, the    illusions are revealed and the battle between the illusions and the    characters will begin.  What initially leads to her illusions is love.    When she was young, "sixteen, I made the discovery - love.  All at once and    much, much too completely" (1368).  She met Allan Grey, the perfect man -    he had "a nervousness, a softness and tenderness which wasn't like a man's,    although he wasn't the least bit effeminate" (1368).                 However, as we are eventually are shown, this illusion wouldn't    last forever.  The young couple got married and, to Blanche, were falling    more and more in love, when one day "coming into a room that I thought was    empty" (1368), this illusion would be shattered.  In this room were her    husband, Allan, and a older male friend of his.  Allan Grey was gay.  Soon,    Blanche realised that all along he had been trying to let her know and get    "the help he needed but couldn't speak of!  He was in the quicksands and    clutching at me - but I wasn't holding him out, I was slipping in with    him!" (1368).  She was falling farther into the illusion with each passing    second with her love, because she couldn't really believe that he was with    her and was for real.                 Allan was in fact an illusion himself, by trying to appear straight    to everyone.  At first, they would try to deny it but the illusion would    soon be totally destroyed when Blanche let it slip while they were dancing    that "I saw!  I know!  You disgust me..." (1369).  With this, Allan runs    outside and kills himself.  I believe that Allan killed himself more so    because he realised Blanche would no longer help him than because she knew.    He believed that if there was anyone who would help him make it through    this whole ordeal, it would be Blanche.                 Because of  all this, Blanche fell into another illusion.  She    figured that if she were loved again, the way Allan and her were meant to    be, then she could be happy again.  So, "after the death of Allan -    intimacies with strangers was all I seemed able to fill my empty heart    					    
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