Tennessee Williams’s protagonist in A Streetcar Named Desire is Blanche. In the play she is a work of social realism. Blanche explains to Mitch that she fibs because she refuses to accept the fate has dealt her. She has lied to herself and others which allowed her to make her life appear more than it should be. For example, in Scene One she tells her sister Stella that she took a “leave of absence” from her schoolteacher job, but later we the audience realized that she lied.
2. Is there a praxis, that is, a need by the Protagonist which drives the main action and results in an organic, cause-and-effect structure? Or is the play episodic, lacking Unity of Action? Either way, explain your thinking. …show more content…
She desires a life style that doesn’t suits her. As many character come along she lies to everyone in a similar way. She faces multiple conflicts as her main lack of youth. She struggles knowing to conflict on realizing that she is no longer a young woman. She interferes emotional feelings thinking that she is unattraction to others and the loss of her true love by the thoughts of his death tormented her. Eventually, Blanche losses the battle with her sanity and its to assume and diagnosed with a mental asylum. As of her illuminating a very lavage life style that she couldn’t afford. “I bought nice clothe and ill wear them. I guess you’re hoping ill say ill put up at a hotel, but I’m not going to put up at a hotel. I want to be near you, got to be with somebody, I can’t be alone!... ” (Scene One 17). Her sister Stella realized that she was very nervous while she was talking to her. Her effect of losing the only person she loved it caused her to go crazy on finding someone that wasn’t