Streetcar Critical Readings Flashcards
Wertheim
Stella and Stanley’s baby represents the future - a Kowalski future, not a DuBois future, as shown by Blanche being removed and Stanley staying in the household, the ultimate victory
Nelson
Blanche’s tragedy manifests itself in the diegetic of the play, making it a universal tragedy (the Blind Mexican Woman is a pertinent example of this)
Cardullo
Blanche’s courting of Mitch mirrors Mary Magdalene’s courting of Jesus and her eventual redemption through it; this is twisted by Mitch’s rejection of Blanche
Atkinson
Streetcar is a deep exploration of a singular person with no sociopolitical aspects
Kazan (director of film)
Stanley didn’t want to rape Blanche, but was eventually forced to by her refusal to bargain with him on his own terms
Stella has found a sort of salvation with Stanley, but at the tremendous cost that she must ignore how unhappy his actions make her
Blanche’s tragic flaw is that she adheres to the Southern tradition that she needs a man for completion — she can complete herself
Bloom
With his characters, Williams builds up archetypes and then destroys our preconceived notions of them (i.e. Blanche as purity, Stanley as machismo)
Desire is the single most important theme of the play — even Blanche, who initially seems to represent purity, is tainted by desire
Stella is genuinely in love with Stanley, ‘like many battered women’
Blanche is ‘a failed Whitmanian’
Popkin
Conducted a study of Williams’ work and found three major character types: the Adonis (Stanley), the Gargoyle (Stella) and the Failed Ingenue (Blanche)
Stanley’s ‘disrespectful’ speech symbolises his freedom and vitality while Blanche’s ‘respectful’ speech shows how she is rooted to the past
Adler
Stanley is more creative than destructive – he shows the vitality that the Old South has lost
McGlinn
Stanley feels judged by Blanche, and his rape of her is his attempt to get her to admit that she is a sexual animal, like him.
Blanche is not the only DuBois who lives in illusions: Stella is in an illusion too, that she is happy and free in her life with Stanley.
Both Blanche and Stella’s illusions are done for the personal good at the sake of the communal good
Shead
Blanche’s trunk ‘unifies’ the poetic and literal realms of the play and is representative of her journey.
Gassner
The poeticism of the play is representative of ‘psychological reality’
Viewing the play in terms of Aristotelian tragedy means accepting that Stanley performed the ‘act of destruction’ which Blanche should have performed herself
Psychopathology ‘is a substitute for fate’ in directing actions within the play when compared to traditional drama
Clum
Blanche is a camp character who represents male homosexuality — she is not ‘straight’ and is in closest proximity to the ‘degenerate’ of the play
Thompson
Williams’ drama is a ‘myth for our time’, portraying man’s constant search for transcendensce and imbuing the human with religious significance
Kierkegaardian Reading
The aesthetic stage can be seen in Blanche and the ethical stage–albeit a misguided version–can be seen in Stanley; the religious stage is nowhere to be found
Berkman
The trauma that underpins Blanche’s reality is not Allen Grey being a ‘degenerate’, as Stella believes, but the fact that she caused his suicide