Sunday, 17 April 2016

English Literature I Beloved and Dorian Gray Essay on the SUPERNATURAL


LAURA ORTEGA 
 

Question 9: Compare the ways in which the writers of Beloved and The Picture of Dorian Gray portray the supernatural.


   In Wilde’s novel, “Dorian Gray” the context plays an important role as Victorian reader’s loved melodramatic plots with cliffhanging suspense and the elements of gothic novel. The supernatural is portrayed in the novel by how the portrait of Dorian Gray changes throughout time. The religious and scientific upheavals of the nineteenth century triggered a fascination on ghost stories and tales of terror. Dorian Gray shows the characteristics of ghostly elements, extreme emotions and strong erotic element portrayed with the uncontrollable lust of Dorian.  In Morrison’s novel, “Beloved” supernatural is portrayed through the involvement of the character Beloved and other characters reaction to her. The novel shows how the characters are haunted by their memory and history. At the time Beloved was set people had many beliefs and traditions that involved supernatural elements and could explain why Beloved is considered a vampire.

   The definition of supernatural is: Any experience, occurrence, manifestation or object that is beyond the laws of nature and science and whose understanding may be said to lie with religion, magic or the mystical. This makes the painting a supernatural element as it changes and gets progressively more horrible throughout the novel to create an effect of awful decay both physically and psychologically in Dorian. The painting changes according to Dorian’s sins and evil doings. Paintings often played a sinister role in Gothic fiction. The first Gothic novel, The Castle of Otranto included a figure stepping from a painting and into reality while describing the haunting gaze of a portrait as it follows the viewer around a room. In Dorian Gray the gaze of the portrait have a fatal ending for Basil. The use of mirrors and reflecting surfaces such as “glass door” and direct and indirect references to selling one’s soul to the devil represent how the portrait has a life of its own but it’s another form of Dorian. The glass door is a symbol of Dorian’s life showing how delicate and special he is and how he can have any door opened for him because his money.  “Dorian Gray” has influence of Gothic novels such as “The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde” as it takes place in a modern city, from the slums to the houses of the wealthy hiding secrets behind closed doors. In both novels the idea of a collection of “selves” is explored. This connects to how the portrait of Dorian is another form of Dorian’s soul and that it acts on its own way. Basil emphasises this when he says: “a dream of form in days of thoughts” which alludes to the idea to educated Victorians of the ´Theory of Forms´. This states that earthly life is filled with imperfect copies of a divine reality and that the perfect “form” exists in another plane. The true self and free self of Dorian is the portrait which has to be hidden to society because the truth is too hard to handle and society was very judgemental. The reflection of what Dorian is doing in his private life is what is reflected in the poem. The fact that Dorian was allowed a private life was because his high status on society and his good financial situation this then helps him to hide the portrait. The imagery of evil and the devil is shown throughout the novel for example in, “They say he has sold himself to the devil for a pretty face” which demonstrates how Dorian was conscious of making this deal and it was himself the one that decided to incorporate the devil to his life. The effect of using the devil is that it creates a violent, sexual and disrupted image. The idea of demons could be connected to the inner demon of Dorian which has been repressed and neglected by Basil that starts when , “ for me he seems to me little more than a lad” showing the high expectations he has set him which has made Dorian challenge this and now is threatening to disrupt this ideal . Devil also connotes to a severe reprimand or expression of anger which could’ve been triggered by Basil as he expected too much from Dorian. Basil considered Dorian untouchable and a saint which has caused him to turn into this other form of himself or even to become his true self.
In the novel Beloved, the supernatural figure is a vampire which is embodied by the character of Beloved. In both of the novels the supernatural figures resemble to the colour red which connotes to danger, sex and blood. The effect of this is to foreshadow how blood is going to be involved either because exchanging fluids or because a murder and to show how violence and sex are going to play a major part in both novels. The novel “Beloved” is haunted by history, memory, specifically rape and violence and a spectre that embodies both which is Beloved. The character of Beloved is not only the ghost of Sethe’s dead child , she is a succubus , a female demon and nightmare figure that sexually assaults male sleepers and drains them of semen. She is related to a vampire a sexualized figure that drains a vital fluid which is blood. This is connected to the African American folklore in the form of shape shifting witches who “ride” their terrified victims in night which embodies Beloved herself. Beloved drains Paul D of semen and Sethe of vitality. Beloved swells because she has swelled the horrible memories and nightmares of both of them and poisons herself. Beloved sucks the soul, heart and mind of her mother. To the point that, “Somebody had to be saved” and Denver leaves home to find help. The physical embodiment of the spiteful poltergeist strangles Sethe and also has a reference to the Devil shown in “Devil's confusion. He lets me look good long as I feel bad. “This demonstrates how Sethe has always been haunted by the evil in her life and not only on Beloved although when she comes along this is now triggered. This show how supernatural is harmful for Sethe whilst in Dorian Gray the supernatural element is parallel to Dorian and they coexist together. Blood is also present when Denver sucked Beloved’s blood from her mother’s breast. “Swallowed her blood right along with (her) mother’s milk” links to the obsessive love Sethe has for her daughter and how Sethe herself was the first that dealt with the passing of blood in the novel first by being pregnant and then by passing her vampire future daughter’s blood to her new daughter. Beloved emerges from water in Ohio River. Sethe has no wish to die on the “bloody side of the Ohio River” the use of “bloody” foreshadows how something related to blood is going to appear from the water of the river, in this case Beloved. The vampire or parasite aspect of Beloved is amplified to the extent of considering a foetus as a parasite to the mother as it attaches and its sucks life from the mother’s uterus and nourishes its body by gleaning the nutrients from the mother’s body. Beloved does this for a second time when she comes to life again and she takes on the bodily form of a pregnant woman which metaphorically could carry her mother’s guilt inside and she then lets it grow and eventually want to kill her. This is demonstrated in how she strangles her and how she is sucking her energy away. When Sethe first sees Beloved she experiences an artificial delivery which could represent her guilt and soul flowing away. On the other hand Beloved being a mosquito like figure is more representative as she could be swelled with a host’s blood.
     Morrison uses other elements apart from the character of Beloved to show how characters are haunted these are by the past, the choices made, by infanticide, slavery and by the tree on Sethe’s back, “Now there was a man, and that was a ´tree`” this symbolise how the past has attached to her and how it haunts her daily and it hasn’t stopped growing. Sethe hasn’t got the money to spare her actions and she is later judged by Paul D when he knows about the infanticide, “You got two feet, Sethe, not four,” which he suggests how he thinks she acted like a beast in attempting to murder her own children. This contrasts with how Dorian gets the chance to hide his secret as his has the money to hide the portrait in a room, to hire someone to place it there and to bribe someone. The differences in class and financial need between them show how Dorian hasn’t dealt with the consequences of his actions and perhaps has never fully considered the damage that they might have had on other people whilst Sethe has had to pay for it going to prison and dealing with it every day. In Dorian Gray, Wilde similarly uses the character of Sibyl and describes her as a “narcissus” to incorporate more supernatural elements. Narcissus rejected the love of all others including the nymph Echo, and was then transformed into a white flower after dying of love for his own image in a pool. The use of narcissus was probably to show how Dorian thought of Sibyl and thinking of her on those aspects could mirror how he thought of himself. Sibyl did indeed die of love but because her blind love of Dorian whilst Dorian did die as narcissus as for a reaction of events on his own image in the portrait and decisions made throughout his life. When Dorian dies in the end his dead body is old and wrinkled demonstrated in the use of “he was withered, wrinkled and loathsome of visage” and the picture recovers its old state magically the use of “loathsome” are used to give an ultimate effect of what Dorian life was. The effect of this is that life is a cycle and when evil was finally dead then the good was brought again. Sibyl’s comment, I have grown sick of shadows” make illusions on how she could have a curse and how could her death be inevitable. The word shadows is effective as it connotes to mystery and hidden acts.

   The reactions to the supernatural figures in both novels are very important to the audience understanding of the overall meaning. For example in Beloved it is explained at the epilogue, They forgot her like a bad dream that no character remembers what Beloved has said. The idea that she only said and thought what they themselves were thinking this could mean that she was a reincarnation of Sethe’s sense of guilt and unforgiving memory. Paul D reacts to the ghost by driving it out and describes her as a “room-and-board witch” this demonstrates how in Beloved the characters can’t deal with the supernatural and it’s a danger for them. In “Dorian Gray” when Basil first sees the painting which is the night when he was killed he says: “Christ! What a thing I must have worshipped! It has the eyes of the devil”. This demonstrates that Basil had an idolised version of Dorian and that he truly believed that all the rumours were not true but now he is flooded with the truth and maybe the fact that he knows is able to look right to the devil’s eyes has foreshadowed his death. In a way the devil’s eyes are like Medusa and petrify Basil which doesn’t know what to do and stays still. He dies in terror for what he has seen.

   The structure of “Beloved” being flashbacks and glimpses of memory from different perspectives are an extended metaphor on how the ghost of Beloved appears unexpectedly and how supernatural elements appear to scare when least expected. It also emphasises how Sethe’s live is haunted by re-memory of her past and how she is impossible to continue with her life. On the other hand Wilde uses a chronological order that emphasises how the devil of Dorian is growing progressively in time. Wilde uses sensual descriptions such as, “there were poisons so subtle that to know their properties one had to sicken of them” the use of poison reflects how Dorian is killing himself by what he is deciding to take in which in this case is the evil actions he is doing and could also resemble the drugs he is taking which are unhealthy and poisonous. Similarly Beloved refers to “venom” as something deadly in the context of “the baby’s venom” which reflects how Beloved is growing evil.  

English Literature I Beloved and Dorian Gray Essay Planning

Convey the threat of VIOLENCE and SELF-DESTRUCTION

BELOVED
DORIAN GRAY
·         Slavery-violence ( dedicated to the “sixty million and more”
·         Murder to daughter to protect her from slavery- animalistic manner- “too thick”.
-with bare hands –minimalistic belongings
-no money to run away : She is punished
·         Guilt and regret
·         Dramatic Irony- the ghost
·         Sethe’s stolen milk.
·         Halle witnesses how Sethe is abused and for this loses his reason. (Self-destruction). Last seen beside the butter churn, spreading butter on his face. “no butter play would change that”.
·         Sixo’s death- humiliation of the “neck-jewellery”. “How much is a nigger supposed to take?”.
·         Self-destruction, as in losing their manhood. Schoolteacher is contributing.
·         Paul D- self-destruction; not allowing his feelings to go out and repression , “tobacco tin”. Violence: attempt to kill his new owner (after Sweet Home) , fights on both sides of Civil War. He envies extended families, having been denied roots by the system of slavery. ( Same system undermines his sense of manhood so that he feels dispossessed)
·         Beloved dominates Sethe, swelling in size as her mother shrinks.
·         Denver drank her sister’s blood along with Sethe’s milk. (p.152)
-when Beloved disappears in cold house she feels she has lost her self but realises she has a self of her own “to look out for and preserve”.
·         Victorian age – reputation, homosexuality not seen with good eyes, Victorians loved scandalous literature
·         Murder to friend for own pleasure and comfort – violent approach “three times”
-no punishment –money allows him this.
·         Intense relief when hearing of James Vane’s death and after Basil’s.
·         “the curved wrinkled of the hypocrite”- portrait in the mirror
·         Basil’s comment on Dorian selfish purposes. “Now and then… he is probably thoughtless, and seems to take a real delight in giving me pain”.
·         The use of the mirror further points out his narcissism. This is also the same mirror that he crushes under his feet the night he tries to "kill" the painting.
·         Dorian uses a mirror to compare himself to the painting (one that Lord Henry gave him) and seems to take pleasure in his corruption: "...looking now at the evil and aging face on the canvas, and now at the fair young face that laughed back at him from the polished glass. The sharpness of the contrast used to quicken his sense of pleasure. He grew more and more in love with of his own beauty, corruption of his own soul ... wondering sometimes which were the more horrible, the signs of sin or the signs of age"

CONTEXT:
Beloved as symbol of America’s past of slavery, with her memories of the Middle Passage.

Paul D experience in the Civil War and time spent in prison camp. –relates to culture and society at the time.

As a slave Baby Suggs has no self, denied of “the map to discover what she was like”. – Dispossessed of her sense of identity and only when freed regained.

Margaret Garner: The Black Book; Killed children rather than save life.
CONTEXT:
Melodrama plots with cliffhanging suspense had popularity between the working and lower-middle class throughout the 19th century. Music was originally used to evade the licensing laws which made it difficult for theatres to stage spoken drama.

Psychological self-destruction: the tapestry in Dorian’s old room may inspire story of Vernon Lee, story about a boy who imagines himself in a world depicted on the tapestry in his room, and becomes obsessed with image of beautiful woman. In the end he falls in love with the woman, who turns to be a serpent.

Victorian Gothic fiction, alongside Robert Louis Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) and Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897) as a representation of how fin-de-siècle literature explored the darkest recesses of Victorian society and the often disturbing private desires that lurked behind acceptable public faces. -
Quotation:
‘Crime belongs exclusively to the lower orders. I don’t blame them in the smallest degree. I should fancy that crime is to them what art is to us, simply a method of procuring extraordinary sensations’ – ( said by Henry) Dorian Gray . Chapter 19

Concept Dorian Gray:
Dorian, with his visits to opium dens and his delight in high culture combines the criminal and the aesthete – the very definition of ‘decadence’ distilled into a single person and a disturbing example of the split between the wholesome public persona and the furtive private life. -

Portrayal of the SUPERNATURAL in the novels

BELOVED
DORIAN GRAY
·         Characters are haunted by the past, the choices made, by tree branches growing on backs, by infanticide, by slavery. 
·         Who is Beloved? – Supernatural succubus, vampire (sucks the soul, heart and mind of her mother ) or real person?
·         Beloved domination over Sethe- physical embodiment of the spiteful poltergeist, strangles Sethe.
·         No character remembers what Beloved has said. (epilogue) idea that she only said and thought what they themselves were thinking. (p.274)- Reincarnation of Sethe’s sense of guilt and unforgiving memory.
·         Beloved emerges from water in Ohio River. Sethe has no wish to die on the “bloody side of the Ohio river”. Foreshadows the supernatural part. – When seethe first sees Beloved she experiences an artificial delivery.
·         How characters react to it:
Paul D – drives the ghost out. Describes her as “a room-and-board witch”
·         Tree symbolises: that the past has attached itself to her but the haunting of it has not stopped growing.
·         vampire or parasitic aspect of motherhood is amplified. Fetus is a parasite to the mother whose uterus it is sucking life from and continues to nourish its body by gleaning the nutrients from the mother's body after birth by nursing; Beloved is the supernatural representation of that. Beloved takes on the bodily form of a pregnant woman though she may be likened to a mosquito that has swelled with a host's blood.

·         Sibyl’s comment “I have grown sick of shadows” –curse

·         Basil: “a dream of form in days of thoughts” – alluding to idea to educated Victorians: “Theory of Forms”. This states that earthly life is filled with imperfect copies of a divine reality and that the perfect “form” – exists in another plane.
·         Elements of the supernatural: the painting which changes showing Dorian's sins and evildoings, the use of mirrors, and direct and indirect references to selling one's soul to the devil.
·         the painting changes,: supernatural definition : Any experience, occurrence, manifestation or object that is beyond the laws of nature and science and whose understanding may be said to lie with religion, magic or the mystical" 
The painting gets progressively more horrible throughout the story, to portray an awful decay.
·         "They say he has sold himself to the devil for a pretty face"  and Basil Hall ward in viewing the painting the night Dorian killed him: "Christ! What a thing I must have worshipped! It has the eyes of a devil"
·         End: Dorian dies and his dead body is old and wrinkled, and the picture recovers it’s old state magically.
·         Dorian to reflect whether ‘some strange poisonous germ crept from body to body till it had reached his own?’ (ch. 11). -
CONTEXT:
Beloved- slavery embodiment
Used in funerals and weddings symbolise past and future.


CONTEXT:
Sibyl described as a “narcissus”- rejecting the love of all others, including the nymph Echo, was transformed into a white flower after dying of love for his own image in a pool.

Paintings often play a sinister role in Gothic fiction. The first Gothic novel, Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1764) includes a figure stepping from a painting and into reality while Melmoth the Wanderer (1820), written by Oscar Wilde’s great-uncle Charles Maturin, describes the haunting gaze of a portrait as it follows the viewer around a room.

Concept Beloved:

As with the haunting of 124, the haunting of the occupants inside, the reader of the novel is haunted by the memories of the experience of reading it. Beyond the supernatural that most people would reject to believe in, the true hauntings that happen to people are very real. Everyone grapples with their demons. Slavery may seem like a distant evil this country and its people no longer have a conscious awareness of. The haunting this novel demonstrates reverberates even today as this country's psychological being still is haunted by slavery. 

English Literature I Beloved and Dorian Gray portrayal of LOVE


Compare and contrast the portrayal of love in both texts.

Love is desire of something in life. You can search for it and find it; this theme can be observed from the point of view of relationships between family, friends or partners. Love is feelings and attitudes. I believe love is shown with loyalty, passion, and madness which I think both texts include.

In the novel “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, Oscar Wilde uses a chronological and linear structure to narrate the story whereas in “Beloved”, Toni Morrison’s novel is not linear as it goes backwards and forwards and from different perspectives. The further the past memories go is the slave ship from Sweet home. Morrison uses many verbs in present tense when talking in the present, for example, “as she began telling about the earrings, she found herself wanting to, liking it.” The effect of this non-linear structure is a challenge to the reader who needs to place everything together and consider each side of the story. Bringing the past over and over again reinforces how important it is in the present and how the characters live conditioned to it. However in “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, the structure is linear and more biased. Wilde centres the novel on Dorian just the title gives it away. The novel is balanced in the way it has ten chapters with Lord Henry and Dorian’s friendship and then another ten chapters with Dorian’s life. Oscar Wilde uses social activities such as dinner parties and attending the theatre to provide temporary relief from intense action. He also uses huge detail with descriptions, for example, “just catch the gleam of the honey sweet and honey-coloured blossoms of a laburnum, whose tremulous branches…” This style of writing has an effect on the reader which is making them read slowly and go through Wilde’s writing phrase by phrase, appreciating the extreme detail.

In the novel “Beloved”, Morrison uses the relationship of Beloved and Denver to represent non –corresponding love and admiration similarly as Wilde’s relationship of Dorian and Basil. Denver feels a strong attachment towards Beloved since the beginning of their relationship however Beloved is more attached to Sethe Denver is trying to have a mother figure that she never had and looks for this in Beloved which she then is obsessed in caring and protecting her. “It was lovely. Not to be stared at, not seen, but being pulled into view by the interested, uncritical eyes of the other […] Denver's skin dissolved under that gaze and became soft and bright like the lisle dress that had its arm around her mother's waist.” Denver goes against Sethe even though the relationship with Beloved is one-sided apparently her addiction comes from how she had “swallowed her blood right along with [her] mother’s milk.” Denver as a result weakens the mother-daughter relationships. The levels of obsession of Denver with Beloved turn in jealousy and over-protective attitude this is shown in how she is warning her “don’t love her (Sethe) too much. Denver becomes independent and mature taking her to the decision of leaving 124 to find someone to save her mother from her toxic relationship with Beloved. Denver represents the “voices of all blacks who survived,” a contrast to Beloved who represents those who died in slavery. In “The Picture of Dorian Gray”, similarly to “Beloved” Basil’s love for Dorian is non-corresponding and Dorian will rather be with Henry. Basil like Denver to Beloved wants to protect and take care of Dorian he refuses to share him with Henry. Basil is quiet and artistic and Henry is cynic and likes monologues. Henry introduces himself to Dorian and this is the point where he drives away from Basil and even reaches a deeper level of friendship, a form of love. Basil in act of jealousy blames Henry for Dorian’s immoral and unexplained actions and his different personality. This makes the friendship between Basil and Henry to deteriorate. Basil will never forgive Henry for taking Dorian’s attention and being his role model. Henry and Basil desire Dorian the difference is that Basil has admiration and sees Dorian as an object of beauty whilst Henry sucks Dorian’s personality and turns him into a mirror-self of himself. This is similar on how Denver and Sethe relationship turns out. Basil at the end is murdered by Dorian this shows that Dorian madness and self-love overcomes Basil’s pure intentions. I think the madness of Dorian towards Basil is a way of loving him, because you only get mad with things you care about.

In the novel “Beloved”, Morrison uses the relationship of Beloved and Sethe to show intimacy and reflects the theme of love. This intimacy is similarly shown between Henry and Dorian in TPODG. Both relationships in the two novels have an element of danger, they are both dangerous for each other in an emotional level.  Beloved takes Sethe essence away and makes her change this dangerous cycle actually helps Sethe in the way she finally opens up and is confident enough to tell her story. These are the “stories that have been „disremembered‟. Beloved sees herself as Sethe, the Sethe that also lost her mother to the institution slavery. Beloved represents daughters who have been separated from their mothers because the Middle Passage and slavery. The relationship of Paul D and Sethe reminds me of Basil and Dorian. Paul D contains his feelings and knows that Sethe will never love him as she loved Halle. Paul D decides to keep his traumatizing experiences for him to protect Sethe from those images and keep her as pure as he can, and for that he decides to kill himself emotionally.  In “The Picture of Dorian Gray” Henry and Dorian’s friendship is mutual love in the form that Dorian is devoted, admires and is loyal to Henry and Henry takes care and interests in him and his opinions something that makes Dorian grow as a person. The relationship is selfish for both of them because the mutual interest is just because they what the other has to offer.  Idolatry makes the friendships and love in “The Picture of Dorian Gray” difficult to understand in terms of love, as it’s another level of admiration you can say you don’t love them you love what they represent. The confusion and mixture of the concepts of friendship in TPODG actually makes the characters friendless and impossible for them to be happy.


In conclusion both novels show how love is shown in the form of friendships, mother-daughter and partner relationships. This can be mutual or not and the can even reach a level of idolatry but this will cause psychological problems like jealousy and resentment. Love is uncontrollable and hard to define and express every character will show it in their own way and some will suffer for this. Love can be toxic, but in the end is a choice. 

English Literature I A Streetcar Named Desire Essay on the sister's relationship

Question 3: “Blanche and Stella come from a world that no longer exists.” In the light of this comment, discuss the relationship between Blanche and Stella in “A Streetcar Named Desire”.

   Tennessee Williams portrays the relationship of the sisters as a bittersweet and dysfunctional one. This is a symbol for his relationship with her sister Rose which even though he cared for her endlessly and then felt regret he let her go to a mental institution without confronting his father ( in this case Stanley) and then they never were as close. Blanche and Stella show care for each other but also how they are growing apart. They’re disjointed relationship shows a clear cultural gap between them. Blanche represents the South and an old generation which values appreciate art, femininity and delicacy whilst Stella adapted to a new culture and has turned to tolerate violence and become satisfied with her simpler live. Blanche discusses Hawthorne, Whitman, Poe and Browning with Mitch while Stella reads “a book of coloured comics” just before Blanche tries to appeal to her to recognise “art”, “poetry” and “music” as necessary for a civilised life. Blanche personality mirrors romantics writers whilst Stella adapts to a new concept of art which is the comic as the comic were becoming a great cultural movement with pop art and new modern styles this symbolises how Stella is part of a new generation whilst Blanche which main topic area is “art” is now getting behind and the new art is evolving whilst she can’t. Elysian Fields means “underworld reserved for dead heroes” as a sort of retirement playground for the virtuous implied in how Stanley goes bowling and plays poker which juxtaposes with the ideal of the man going to work to get money- gender equality in the workspace wasn’t dealt with in the society yet-  as Stanley barely mentions work. The effect of this is to show how men can bring more to women than just money. Is no coincidence that Williams decides that Blanche stayed in “Laurel” as this is 200 miles away from New Orleans which offers a chance of Blanche’s reputation to become widely known. The fact that Blanche has moved from Belle Reve to Laurel and then to Elysian Fields shows that she is going through a journey and that for her this is another stop as she can’t fully adapt herself in one environment which demonstrates how she needs Stella for a home in contrast to Stella which decided to change completely and commit to her new life in New Orleans.

   In, “Why, that you have to live in these conditions!” Blanche’s sense of superiority is confirmed and shows she is disparaging about Stella’s new life. Her disapproval for her new life and her rejection to Stanley show a lack of empathy for Stella and demonstrate she is not self-aware of Stella’s feelings this is demonstrated in how she describes Stanley by “Well-if you’ll forgive me –he’s common!” implying he is too basic for Stella and herself then when she is surprised that her words have caused Stella to cry in “Oh, Stella, Stella, you’re crying! (…) – Does that surprise you?” this shows she is self-absorbed and doesn’t think about the consequences of her words yet the use of exclamation mark could represent a sense of worry for Stella demonstrating she doesn’t do this on purpose. Stella’s response to her sister’s critique is:  “Aren’t you being a little intense about it? It not that bad at all! New Orleans isn’t like other cities.” This implies Stella’s change of mentality and her change of ideals showing a more open-minded personality than Blanche as Stella has been able to adapt to this new multicultural society of New Orleans and she has learned to live with everyone’s differences demonstrating she isn’t part of the “South” anymore. Stella says in Scene One that: “the best I could do was make my own living, Blanche” Williams effects of this is to invite the audience to interpret the social transformation which Stella has undergone. The idea of her having to earn a living, contrasts significantly with the image of “columns”. Stella has been forced to adapt her lifestyle in order to integrate in this modern, male-dominated society. On the other hand, Blanche is self-immersed in a world of fantasy as she suggests in ‘make-believe’ and where she clings on to her past of wealth and comfort. Blanche cannot integrate: she does not understand this society, in which she cannot fit, for she is ‘incongruous’, which enhances this sense of disconnection from the brutal real world. These differences are what are bringing their relationship further apart furthermore Stella’s new home New Orleans was known for a wide ethnic diversity which doubles with Blanche’s background on the cotton plantation. Stella demonstrates she doesn’t see herself as the old generation of the south that Blanche represents in the way that she tells her: “Don’t you think your superior attitude is a bit out of place?”.

   Stella is unimpressed by Blanche’s criticism of Stanley which influences her a little as she joins her in insulting him but her love for him is more dominant as she adores him and is having his baby which foreshadows the ending of the play. In Scene Eight Stella says: “Making a pig of himself” showing she has some sympathy for Blanche’s fastidiousness but does nothing to stop that showing her content for her life. The only time Stella complains before Blanche influences her is in Scene One when she says not to: “holler” when Stanley throws her a package of meat. The fact that she complains about his shouting and not about how he primitively throws the meat at her shows how they’re relationship is based on physical passion and attraction. Stella shows she isn’t as different from Blanche when she recognises that: “People have got to tolerate each other’s habits, I guess” which shows that she is self-aware that Stanley is rough, dominant and culturally different from her background but she feels attracted to this and the ideal of a safe future compensates this. Stella’s close relationship with Stanley brings her apart from Blanche as she doesn’t feel comfortable or approves him. Stella’s devotion for Stanley is shown in her reaction to his violence: “I was –sort of –thrilled by it” this shows how Stella is attracted to the “macho gesture” and her passionate declaration of, “I love him”. For society at the time  this acts of violence were not seen as sexist this can be seen in how Mitch reacts with “ There’s nothing to be scared of. They’re crazy about each other” and how Stella sees Eunice’s and Steve’s relationship as something normal which foreshadows her future relationship with Stanley. It’s impossible for the sisters to be connected in this way as Blanche has clearly expressed her opinion with Stanley describing him in a disrespectful way with the nicknames of “Polak”, “sub-human” and “survivor of the Stone Age”. The disgust of Blanche for Stanley goes further on because he has offered Stella a safe net and they love each other endlessly which is something she pursues this could imply that she deeply is jealous about this and her disgust is just a representation of this. This could be contemplated as she is willing to marry Mitch which no more different than Stanley. The endless love between Stella and Stanley is demonstrated at the end of the play when Stella chooses not to accept the idea that her sister is sane as that would mean to accept the accusations of Stanley instead she chooses Stanley over her. Stella surrenders completely to him which gradually makes her remember less and less of her early life and accepts her husband’s standards becoming more and more like him. This deep relationship is impenetrable for Blanche.

   Overall it’s believed  that a good relationship between two individuals is thought to be one of equals but in the case of the sisters Blanche is dominant over Stella which shows how Stella would’ve been dominated by either of the protagonists but she chooses the one which was a `safer ‘option for her. In the society at the time women had to depend financially on men as after the war women workspace was reduced back again and women rights weren’t settled yet. Both Stella and Blanche show common ground in the idea that they are dependent on men. The differences in personality of the sisters show how Stella has always been in the shade of Blanche which is ironic as Blanche is consistently playing with light and shadow trying to hide in the shadow to preserve her beauty and mystery whilst now Stella is exposed to light and shows herself clear and her baby symbolises more light which is a metaphor for happiness and truth – connoted to what a baby brings to a home and the innocence of a child. Stella is a very easy going person and she hardly gets upset. She never argues with Stanley and shows a great extent of contentment with what she has and where she is in life whilst Blanche on the other hand is very uptight and she seems to try and set herself apart from the rest as she always tries to appear younger and more proper than she truly is. Blanche was raised in southern bell, she has always acted properly but she has never truly been proper. Williams establishes a contrast between the two sisters as Stella seems weak, frail and too afraid to speak out for her own which is shown by how she gives in to Stanley when she allows him to hit her or break things for example: “She ran downstairs and went back to him”. The fact that she run backed shows she is desperate and clingy and being it “downstairs” could be an extended metaphor for Stella running down to hell which has connotations of violence, brutality and games which Stanley is a symbol of. Stella states that she never had the chance to talk much with her in: “You haven’t said a word to me “and “You haven’t given me a chance” which shows how Blanche is dominant over her. Stella uses indirect form of showing her feelings towards Blanche in comparison to Blanche which is loud and direct this is demonstrated in how Stella uses a certain dry, sarcastic note when she tells Blanche: “I like to wait on you, Blanche. It makes it seem more like home” which is an irony for how their relationship has always been. The word “home” is used to make a contrast in what her new home is and how the old home represented the world that they once shared. Her reference to it is a reminder that this world still exists for both sisters, even though Stella has committed to Stanley. Blanche treats Stella as a child, a “blessed baby”, ordering her to “stand up”, rebuking her for her untidiness, and patronisingly telling her that she is “as plump as a little partridge. The fact that Stella does not take this opportunity to point out the reason for her plumpness to Blanche shows how she is more contained and how she wouldn’t spill out her emotions and thoughts in the way Blanche would it could also mean she empathises with Blanche’s clear downfall and she decides to keep it from her for her best.


    In different adaptations such as the one of 1951 with Vivien Leigh and Kim Hunter the relationship between them shows more physical contact between them being affectionate but show psychological difference whilst in the 1955 version with Jessica Lange and Diane Lane the relationship between them seems closer and warmer in both senses. In conclusion, even though their relationship is getting colder Stella and Blanche have a good relationship as Stella shows she cares about Blanche as she shows her support with her relationship with Mitch this demonstrates that she wants Blanche to be part of her new life she also shows she trusts her as she doesn’t ask about Belle Reve in detail and the loss. Similarly Blanche’s over-protective reactions to Stanley’s violence show she cares about her which is also demonstrated in how she gets excited about the baby. The relationship between of them is one of need and support.

English Literature I A Streetcar Named Desire Essay on Violence

Q. “Elysian Fields is a world filled with violence, in which Blanche cannot survive.” In the light of this comment explore Williams’ dramatic presentation of violence in “A Streetcar Named Desire”. In your answer you must consider relevant contextual factors.


   A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams is a drama that mines the playwright’s own life. Blanche represents some of the main features of his life such as; alcoholism, depression, thwarted desire, loneliness, and insanity. Williams lived in an era unfriendly to homosexuality and had to cope at young age of a troubling emotional phase.
Williams’s father was a heavy drinker. Her sister Rose suffered from mental illness; she was institutionalized for the rest of her life after an operation. The character of Blanche contains these recognizable elements ; shown in Scene 1 with the example of “She carefully replaces the bottle” and in Scene 9 with her hysterical outburst “Get out of here quick before I start screaming fire”. Stanley Kowalski could be a representation of William’s own father and other males who tormented Williams during his childhood. Although he despised his father he grew up to appreciate him and realised he had given him his tough survival instinct. The idea of survival from tormenting men and life struggles could remind the reader of Blanche, on the other hand Blanche could also mine her sister, Rose, as she also suffered from mental illness.

   Elysian Fields is represented as a world of violence by the primitive life demonstrated throughout the play and the aggressive language Stanley uses. The relationship of Stella and Stanley is based on the primitive focus of nature. Stanley is shown to be primitive and demonstrate intensity by acts like, “Catch!” or “I am the King around here”. However the primitive personality of Stanley seems to be the main thing that attracts Stella, this however is something Blanche has never experienced before and therefore she is surviving this unusual circumstance. Stanley is the romantic idea of man untouched by civilization and its effeminizing influences.
Blanche has to survive in an environment in which her values and views are not the same to the rest of the characters. Stanley is not able to perceive and fully appreciate culture, “Such things as art-as poetry and music-such kinds of new light have come into the world since then” this shows as if, “Stanley Kowalski, survivor of the Stone Age!” is trapped in primitive, sexual, basic entertainment and needs whilst Blanche has develop more mentally but she has no one to share this with. Her knowledge only brings her further from the rest of the people. Blanche has to cope with violent comments from Stanley such as “So I could twist the broken end in your face!”, which even though they are in a mockery tone they still impose the power Stanley has over Blanche.

   Blanche had to survive worst circumstances when she was in Belle Reve therefore her new condition in Elysian Fields should be hard but at least she has her sister to rely on. Her experience in Belle Reve has a huge impact on her to the point she can’t goes through re-memory. Death is described as “burned like rubbish” –gruesome and powerful, this is a violent perspective of death that makes death seem meaningless. In “I stayed and fought for it, bled for it, almost died for it.” Blanche emphasises her self-pity with the use of personal pronoun “I” and intensifies the sensation of her looking like a victim. She had to go through this experience by herself and for this I think that when she comes to Elysian Fields she is already emotionally touched and she can’t stand more violence and brutality, her previous experience make this new situation harder as she now has the world to her shoulders.  
   Blanche says that the only unforgivable crime is deliberate cruelty. Blanche is dishonest but she never lies out of malice. Her cruelty is unintentional often a misguided effort to please. Stanley instead decides to end with a merciless attack against an already emotional-beaten Blanche. He buys her a bus ticket for her to go, when he knows she has nothing left and nowhere to go. Blanche is already having difficulty to survive with her inner problems and she is in company so it will be worse if she didn’t even have Stella or she had to go and find a way of living as she has no money left.

   Blanche is lost. She seeks companionship and protection in the arms of strangers. She has never recovered from her tragic and consuming love for her first husband. Blanche is in need of a defender. She has to survive until she finds someone that will protect her from mean people like Stanley and even more of herself. Mitch was thought to be a plausible option but ends being to coward to cope with Blanche past.
   Elysian Fields is different from Belle Reve’s “big place with white columns” where Blanche lived. She has to adapt to this new situation where there is not even a room for her but a prepared couch and there is one bathroom for the three of them. Williams shows flexibility in the set as he uses both the exterior and interior of the home , this expresses the notion that the home is not a domestic sanctuary. Characters leave and enter the apartment, often bringing with them the problems they have in the larger environment. The case when this is more effective is just before Stanley rapes Blanche, when the back wall of the apartment becomes transparent to show the struggles occurring on the street, foreshadowing the violation that is about to take place in the Kowalski’s’ home. At this point talking in an animalistic tone, Blanche is taken over and her strives for survival are conquered by the dominant and more powerful animal in the kingdom, in this case Stanley.

   At the end of the play, Blanche can’t fight for survival anymore and retreats into her own private fantasy to partially shield herself from reality’s harsh blows. Blanche’s insanity emerges as she retreats fully into herself, leaving the objective world behind in order to avoid accepting reality. For her to escape she must come to perceive the exterior world as that which she imagines in her head .Blanche’s final, deluded happiness suggests that, to some extent, fantasy is a vital force at play in every individual’s experience, despite reality’s inevitable triumph. Fantasy is her mechanism of survival.

   Elysian Fields has a cultural clash this is relevant as this affects Blanche in a way that in Scene 9 ,when the Mexican woman appears selling “flowers for the dead,” Blanche reacts with horror because the woman announces Blanche’s fate.
Blanche can be seen ending by her dual flaws—her inability to act appropriately on her desire and her desperate fear of human mortality.

   Stella in order to survive chooses to leave Belle Reve and start a new life with Stanley. Then at the end Stella chooses to remain with Stanley and rely on, love and believe in her husband instead of her sister. Stella is acting towards a guarantee of her own survival as Stanley represents a more secure future than Blanche does. Blanche who had planned this similarly, her way of surviving in Elysian Fields was to marry Mitch as this will allow her to escape from destitution.  Men’s exploitation of Blanche’s sexuality has left her with a poor reputation. Blanche sees marriage as her only possibility for survival. Stanley takes her the only chance she has to survive by gossiping about her reputation with Mitch, making him reject her. Her last chance is the millionaire Shep Huntleigh—who might rescue her. Once again Stanley takes this away from her both in her fantasy world and in the realist world. She has no escape now. As Blanche cannot see her dependence on men, she has no realistic conception of how to rescue herself. Her dependence on men is what is leading her to her downfall rather than her salvation. By relying on men, Blanche puts her fate in the hands of others.
   Williams presents violence through drinking, both Stanley and Blanche drink excessively at various points during the play. Stanley’s drinking is social: he drinks with his friends at the bar, during their poker games, and to celebrate the birth of his child. Blanche’s drinking, on the other hand, is anti-social, and she tries to keep it a secret. She drinks on the sly in order to withdraw from harsh reality. A state of drunken stupor enables her to take a flight of imagination, such as concocting a getaway with Shep Huntleigh. For both characters, drinking leads to destructive behaviour: Stanley commits domestic violence, and Blanche deludes herself. Yet Stanley is able to rebound from his drunken escapades, whereas alcohol augments Blanche’s gradual departure from sanity.
   In adaptations of the play in 1995 with Jessica Lange as Blanche she seems nervous and trapped. Her acting portrays a more delicate and fragile woman which leads to thinking she needs to survive harder as she is weaker. Whilst in the adaptation in which Marlon Brando is Stanley, the relationship between him and Blanche seem more sexual and aggressive but Blanche seems stronger and up front making her seem secure and more able to cope with everything.


English Literature I A Streetcar Named Desire "The Death Speech"

The Importance of this speech in the play:


Blanche’s death monologue halfway through scene one is significant to the play. This is the audience first contact with Blanche’s feelings and background, the reason Belle Reve is lost and why she is visiting.

The speech sets the idea of the complicated relationship between the sisters. Blanche displays her resentment of Stella leaving Belle Reve (which ironically means “Beautiful Dream” ) by first declaring “I stayed and fought for it, bled for it, almost died for it.”. Her monologue starts with the same feeling of resentment.

The speech is the greatest peak of dramatic tension in scene one, and is one of the highest in the play. The bitterness in the words and the emotion in them help the audience realise Blanche’s emotional instability and neuroses.
The use of personal pronouns “I” emphasises her self-pity and her intention to be shown as a victim. Blanche is foreshadowing deaths and future financial problems, along with the illusion to the “Grim Reaper”. She uses brutal language to describe death in a very heart-lighted manner. The noun, “rubbish “in, “had to be burned like rubbish”, is cruel and gruesomely realistic. Then “when they cried out, Hold me! “And “struggle for breath and bleeding” show how the deaths were slow, tortuous and ugly. This is the brutality of life. It shows a realistic aspect of life, a theme that will go through the play. Blanche realises that
 “Funerals are quiet, but deaths not always”, this shows internal confrontation with herself, I think she is suffering from all that she has seen, and she holds that against her sister because she needed somebody to support her, but she will accuse her for staying with Stanley because she doesn’t want to be shown too weak or too vulnerable, even to her own sister. The audience knows that Blanche speaks with clarity when she wants to; she chooses her words, so in the death speech she surprises us with her words, as her feelings are all over the place.

At this point Blanche has already taken two glasses of whiskey, so her dramatic monologue could be affected by her drinking. We know that her drinking problem is to void her past and forget the lost. She refuses to show her real self completely and instead creates the illusion of what “ought to be”.  She does not want to see things clearly but wants all ugly truths covered over with the beauty of imagination and illusion. Blanche’s out bursting and direct unpredictable speech gets the audience intrigued and passionate about her. With all that she has been through, the audience can almost be comprehensive towards her.

Looking deeper in the death speech; the tone is angry and sad already telling us much about Blanche’s personality. Her facial expressions are important as we can see her exaggerating and on the border of crying. Stella here is surprised and confused, she tries to get away maybe because she was feeling attacked or ashamed but Blanche grabs her forcing her to listen. It already sets an idea of who of the two sisters has the power.

Blanche has an inability to tell the truth and normally tells the things as she wishes them to be. This makes it hard for us to really believe in her, as this could be exaggerated or even she could’ve done things to pay of the debts and she won’t admit them. Blanche is in a neurotic state.

This speech setting is both of them sat around a table looking at each other, and loud background music of the ‘blue piano’. This makes it uncomfortable, as there is a distance between them that will set a physical barrier between them setting a accusing and defending position above the emotional barrier that already exists. It would be different if instead they would be next to each other being more comprehensive and warming. In the film of 1951 this is acted with them standing up next to the staircase. There is not much lighting in the scene.
I have watched other versions apart from the original film, to capture different senses from different interpretations. For example in : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oJA-r0hUnKQ A Broadway version from March 1992. The actress that plays Blanche shows an accusation and aggressive tone. The level of her voice goes up towards the end and she talks about “your Polak” in a disgusted sense. Instead on a theatrical representation I also watched: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJtlu7BIl0o (minute 12:50 to 14:26), it made me get a different sensation to it, there was a tone of sadness and contained anger. Blanche shows she needed and needs moral support; she needed someone there to help her deal with all the deaths. Here she grinds her teeth showing how she could be containing herself because she may not want to show the real horrors she is remembering herself. The mood is more defensive and of begging for forgiveness.

The monologue occurs in a dim light to foreshadow the fear of light connected to Blanche. This relates to the death of her first husband and her fear of being examined too closely, the world of reality. Blanche is a character that prefers illusion and a world of semi-darkness.

In conclusion Blanche’s life is in decline while the world of Stella continues. This leads her to burst in anger and resentment therefore; the importance of this speech is that Williams has set a dramatic tense tone for the conflicts to follow, for these future conflicts to be sat upon a start point. Setting that Blanche is unstable, and she has contempt towards Stanley and resentment towards Stella.