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A streetcar named desire


            The significance of the setting is a major factor for Tennessee Williams to show the trouble Blanche was going through. During that time in New Orleans a great city full of excitement and action was a perfect place for Blanche to show her true self. Blanche doesn't really fit in well with the style, because she is from a proper society. With the tragic death of her husband, thinking that it was her fault for his suicide she runs wild in the mad city of New Orleans. The streetcars that she came on Desire, Cemetaries, and Elysion fields gave us a preview of what was going to happen during the play. .
             Thinking that she wasn't able to please her husband sexually she seeks a substitute to take place of her husband. Especially with young boys she is known as a whore around town. During these times a man could enter a hotel as "Flamingo Hotel" and sleep with a woman. Even a near by army base has heard of Blanche. She did this because she though this would fill her empty heart. By having sex with total strangers. The city provided her a place to morn and try to forget about her husband. .
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             The apartment played a crucial part in the story as while, without doors but curtains allowed the story to clash with all the characters. Blanch was very careful to hide herself from the light around the house. She was very unhappy with her age or getting older. She covered house with paper lamps to make the place more dim. This way the author was able to show house venerable she really was, compared to Stella. .
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             All of her lavish living including the tiera, alcohol, cur coats, and rhinestones showed how insecure she was about herself. She is the only one to blame for the lost of her families plantation. .
            


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