Thursday, September 19, 2019
Illusion and Fantasy in A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams
Illusion and Fantasy in A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams      An illusion is fake belief whereas fantasy is imagining fanciful  visions. Both these themes are important in the play because they show  how they can be mistaken for reality by each character in the play.    The themes illusion and fantasy are involved from the start of the  play. We learn from when Stanley throws the package of meat down to  Stella that he is a dominant character and that his relationship with  Stella isnââ¬â¢t as happy as it may seem to be. Even in scene 2, Stanleyââ¬â¢s  aggressiveness is shown towards Stella, ââ¬Ësince when do you give me  orders?ââ¬â¢. However, the most significant example of his brutality is  during the Poker Game in scene 3. This is where the themes illusion  and fantasy are brought in, because Stella lives in a fantasy world  with Stanley. We learn how Stanley keeps Stella under the thumb.  However violent Stanley might be, she wonââ¬â¢t reveal that her  relationship has problems to Blanche or anyone, ââ¬Ëit wasnââ¬â¢t anything as  serious as you seem to take it. In the first place, when men are  drinking and playing poker anything can happen.ââ¬â¢ Stella has  psychologically made herself get used to this behaviour from Stanley,  ââ¬Ëwhy, on our wedding ââ¬â soon as we came in here ââ¬â he snatched off one  of my slippers and rushed about the place, smashing the light bulbs  with it.ââ¬â¢ She has made it seem normal because she is illusioned by the  thought that what they have is too strong to let go. Stanley is like  an addictive drug to her, for example, in scene 4, Stella is in  ââ¬Ënarcotised tranquillityââ¬â¢. However rough he may be, Stella needs  Stanley as a fix. It is as though she is brainwashed by him. When  Blanche comments on the previous nights even...              ...he  becomes desperate and unhinged. She sees marriage as her only means of  escaping her demons, so Mitchââ¬â¢s rejection amounts to a sentence of  living in her internal world. Once Mitch crushes the make-believe  identity Blanche has constructed for herself, Blanche begins to  descend into madness. With no audience for her lies, which Blanche  admits are necessary when she tells Mitch that she hates reality and  prefers ââ¬Å"magic,â⬠ Blanche begins performing for herself. Yet Blancheââ¬â¢s  escapist tendencies no longer show her need to live in a world full of  pleasant bourgeois ease. Instead of fancy and desire, her new  alternate reality reflects regret and death. She is alone, afraid of  both the dark and the light; her own mind provides her with a last  support of escape. Her fantasies control her, not the other way  around, but still she shrinks from the horror of reality.                      
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