Friday, November 15, 2019
The Smbolisms of the Name, Blanche Dubois in A Streetcar Named Desire :: Tennessee Williams, A Streetcar Named Desire
In the first few scenes of "A Streetcar Named Desire", Tennessee   Williams shows us a complex woman, named Blanche Dubois. This   paper will explore the symbolisms of her name.    The name Blanche is French and means white or fair. Her last name  DuBois is of French origin as well and translates as ââ¬Å"made of woodâ⬠.   The name suggests that Blanche is a very innocent and pure person.   When she appears in scene one, ââ¬Å"she is daintily dressed in a white  suit with a fluffy bodice, necklace and earrings of pearl, white  gloves and a hatâ⬠¦Ã¢â¬  (Sc.1 p. 2073). White is also the color of light  and represents perfection and virginity but throughout the play it  becomes obvious that Blanche cannot call any of the traits of her name  her own. She is a seductive and promiscuous woman. Only the illusory  image, which she tries to create for herself, suggests these traits,  but her true nature is not like that at all. She constantly tries to  hide her embarrassing past from her new acquaintances, because she  fears that they might not accept her anymore. In order to maintain  her apparent social status among her new neighbors and friends, she  builds an intertwined net of lies, which creates a false image of  her. She believes in this imaginary world, and as soon as there is  the slightest sign of destruction, she seems to be lost, and her  nervous condition worsens. Therefore all she cares about is to keep  that image alive. Her first name is therefore quite ironic since it  means the exact opposite of Blancheââ¬â¢s true nature and character.     Her last name, however, stands in contrast to her first name. Made of  wood suggests something solid and hard, which is the exact opposite of  her fragile nature and nervous condition. Wood can also be associated  with forest or jungle, and regarding her past, the connection becomes  clear. Blanche indulges in a rather excessive lifestyle. She has sex  with random strangers and is known throughout her hometown of Laurel  for that. Her former life is more like a jungle or a forest, because  it is hard to see through all this and detect the real Blanche. As in  a jungle, Blanche cannot find a way out of this on her own. The term  jungle appears in the play as well. In scene ten, when Stanley is  about to rape Blanche, ââ¬Å"the inhuman jungle voices rise upâ⬠ (Sc.10 p.  2130). The jungle can be associated with wildness, brutality and  inhuman behavior. As mentioned about, wood represents something hard,  or hard working. The Du in front of that however, suggests something    					    
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