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Register Don't have an account? Belle Reve. View source. Why does Stella leave Stanley? In the film adaptation of A Streetcar Named Desire, there is a suggestion that Stella may leave Stanley after she finds out about the rape. Why does Blanche bathe so much? Why was Blanche kicked out of Laurel? She was not given a leave of absence by her school—she was kicked out after a father reported his discovery that Blanche was having a relationship with a seventeen-year-old boy.
Stanley tells Stella that he has bought Blanche a birthday present: a one-way bus ticket back to Laurel. Why does Stella ask Stanley to understand and be nice to Blanche? Because Blanche has been through a lot with all ofthe families weight on her sholders. How does blanche feel about Stanley? With the appearance of Blanche, Stanley feels an uncomfortable threat to those things that are his.
Blanche becomes a threat to his way of life; she is a foreign element, a hostile force, a superior being whom he can't understand. She is a challenge and a threat. Why did Blanche's husband kill himself? This deliberate act of cruelty on Blanche's part caused her young husband to commit suicide.
Blanche has always thought she failed her young lover when he most needed her. She felt also that she was cruel to him in a way that Stanley would like to be cruel to her. What does Stanley throw at Stella? In Scene One, Stanley throws a package of meat at his adoring Stella for her to catch. Why does Stanley tell Blanche about the baby?
So her former life was more like a jungle or a forest, because it was hard to see through all this and detect the real Blanche. As in a jungle, Blanche could not find a way out of this on her own. The term jungle appears in the play as well. The jungle can be associated with wildness, brutality and inhuman behaviour. As already mentioned above, wood represents something hard, or hard-working. The Du in front of that , however, suggests something aristocratic and noble.
There seems to be a contradiction in these two terms which can be explained with the nature of her character. The way Blanche tries to create an aristocratic and sophisticated image of herself , but is in fact the complete opposite, displays this ambiguity.
Blanche DuBois cannot only be translated as white wood but also as white and made of wood , which makes it easier for the reader to detect that she seems pure and innocent on the outside, but is really quite tough and calculating when it comes down to her image and her future, especially concerning her search for a husband.
At first she seems to be innocent and pure, but later her past and her true nature can be discovered. Stella is a Latin term which simply means star. Stars in general are considered to be the light which breaks through the darkness. Considering that light is the opposite of darkness, and darkness itself stands for not-knowing and intellectual dullness, the stars can be regarded as reality and knowledge shining through ignorance.
Stars can also be a symbol for high ideals or goals set too high. The deeper significance of her name reveals her role in the play. The symbol of a star suggests light, hope and stability. This is quite a good description of her role and her position in the play. Stella is the connection between Blanche and Stanley, the two major characters, because she contains character traits of both of them, and can therefore relate to them better than anyone else can.
Therefore she can be considered to be the stabilising element of the play. She is the negotiator between the two so very different characters. Stella and Blanche have the same rather wealthy and cultivated background, which is the connection between the two women. Stella also has several things in common with Stanley. One of them is their love for wild sex Ehrenhaft During a conversation with Blanche, Stella tells her about her wedding night:.
Stella: Why, on our wedding night — soon as we came in here — he snatched off one of my slippers and rushed about the place smashing the light-bulbs with it. Blanche: He did — what? Stella: He smashed all the light-bulbs with the heel of my slipper! Blanche: And you — you let him? Stella: I was — sort of — thrilled by it. Williams This excerpt clearly shows the connection between Stella and Stanley, but there is something else that ties them together.
Stella is, just like Stanley , very down to earth and has a very open and honest nature. She does not lie or try to hide anything in her life by creating a false image of herself, as Blanche does. For both, Stanley and Blanche, Stella is their star and their hope.
They always seek her support and shelter. Stella is the stable element of the play, because she does not show any sign of rapid mood swings like Blanche and Stanley do, and this is what makes her the small and quiet star of the play. Belle Reve. The term suggests an illusion, which is not quite true, for the plantation really once existed.
On the other hand, beautiful dream suggests that something beautiful, which has once existed, faded away. However, looking more closely at the name, it reveals that there is a grammatical mistake.
The adjective belle is feminine, but it should be masculine, for reve is masculine. Tennessee Williams probably did this on purpose and not by mistake, because it underlines the fact that Belle Reve was just a dream which crumbled. Desire, Cemeteries and Elysian Fields.
At the beginning of the play Williams introduces three terms which do not reveal their symbolic meaning right away, but the reader comes to realise their sense and importance later in the play. Desire is her first step, just as it was the first step of her life after her husband Allan had died.
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