Sunday, May 31, 2020
Blanche, Mitch, and A Streetcar Named Desire - Literature Essay Samples
In the 1947 play A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, the relationship between Blanche and Mitch is a key subplot in the tale of Blancheââ¬â¢s descent into madness and isolation. Whilst Williams initially presents Mitch as the answer to all Blancheââ¬â¢s problems and as a viable male suitor, it soon becomes evident that Blanche and Mitch are not meant to be together. Mitch, in the broader progression of Williams work, is merely another man who will ruin Blancheââ¬â¢s life. Williams first presents Mitch as Blancheââ¬â¢s potential saviour, and indeed that is how Blanche also wishes to see him at the start. Not only might Mitch be able to provide for Blanch financially, but emotionally too. Blanche remarks that Mitch is ââ¬Å"sensitiveâ⬠, and they share a tragic romantic past. Furthermore, Mitch seems to fit Blancheââ¬â¢s ideal of the Southern Beau when compared to other men, whom she regards as ââ¬Å"apesâ⬠. Mitch is formal and respectful, calling Blanche ââ¬Å"Miss DuBoisâ⬠and Blanche admits that she appreciates his ââ¬Å"gallantryâ⬠. IT seems that Blanche and Mitch are in a way united by their shared loss, and are brought together by mutual experience. They both need to fill a vacuum in their lives and conveniently find each other as a means for emotional (and financial) security. Mitch hits upon this, stating: ââ¬Å"you need somebody, and I need somebody ââ¬â could it be you and me Blanche?â⬠. There is even a b rief tenderness in their relationship and Blanche to find solace in Mitch; she ââ¬Å"huddlesâ⬠into him and gives ââ¬Å"long grateful sobsâ⬠before exclaiming ââ¬Å"sometimes, thereââ¬â¢s God, so quicklyâ⬠. We can see the closeness of the bond between the two of them as Mitch is the only character who Blanche tells the truth about ââ¬Å"Alanâ⬠, and it is after this outburst of emotion that they are united together. However, Blanche and Mitchââ¬â¢s relationship is doomed to fail by the nature of Mitchââ¬â¢s incomplete, pseudo-masculinity. When recounting the story of Alan, Blanche reveals that she couldnââ¬â¢t be with him because he wasnââ¬â¢t ââ¬Å"like a manâ⬠ââ¬â obviously alluding to his homosexuality which was taboo and illegal at the time. Yet throughout the play we find that Mitch too isnââ¬â¢t ââ¬Å"like a manâ⬠. From the very beginning we see that Mitch works in ââ¬Å"the spare parts departmentâ⬠, a possible reference to his incomplete masculinity according to Kolin; he seems never to have matured, still living with his ââ¬Å"motherâ⬠; and when he dances with Blanche, it is ââ¬Å"awkwardlyâ⬠. Similarly, his conversation is awkward and unromantic, as he remarks on how he ââ¬Å"sweatsâ⬠and how much he ââ¬Å"weighsâ⬠. It soon becomes apparent that Mitch is therefore not the ââ¬Å"Rosenkavalierâ⬠or ââ¬Å"Armandâ⬠th at Blanche paints him to be. This is the problem. Blanche, who ââ¬Å"doesnââ¬â¢t want realismâ⬠but ââ¬Å"magicâ⬠, makes Mitch fir the mould of the Southern Beau which she desires by means of her literary allusions despite the fact that he belongs to the new order of men in the post-World War II era. She demands that he ââ¬Å"bowsâ⬠and commands him to ââ¬Å"danceâ⬠. Mitch becomes Blancheââ¬â¢s pet man whom she moulds into her ideal of masculinity which is, like Blanche, ââ¬Å"incongruousâ⬠to contemporary ideals of masculinity which promoted strong men who were war veterans and the defenders against tyranny after World War II. Blanche, as with everything, clouds the relationship with Mitch in illusion, which Williams symbolises with the scene when Blanche invites Mitch to place a ââ¬Å"lanternâ⬠over the light in her room. She says ââ¬Å"I canââ¬â¢t stand a naked bulbâ⬠, a metaphor for her refusal to accept reality, and placing the lantern over the light is symbolic of Blancheââ¬â¢s masking the truth of her age and past from Mitch. Mitchââ¬â¢s masculinity is further questioned when compared with Stanley. Stanley is the ideal stereotypical manââ¬â¢s man of the time: he is highly sexed; he brings home ââ¬Å"meatâ⬠for his wife, symbolic of the hunter-gatherer dynamic; and he plays sport. Furthermore, when it comes to Blanche, Stanley is assertive and successfully has his way with he in the implied rape of scene 10, thus asserting his sexual dominance. Mitch however is unable to do so, and in his attempted rape he ââ¬Å"fumbles to embrace herâ⬠. It is therefore clear that, either due to Mitchââ¬â¢s incomplete masculinity, or the veneer of chivalrous romanticism Blanche lives under, eventually will fail. In the end, Mitch yells that is was ââ¬Å"lies, lies, lies!â⬠that tore them apart and the relationship ends. Yet Williams makes greater use of the relationship between Mitch and Blanche than as a mere subplot, doomed to fail. Thematically, Mitch, like Stella, becomes a battleground for the ideology clash between Stanley and Blanche, who represent the New and the Old World respectively. Stanley: the immigrant worker, ââ¬Å"100% Americanâ⬠, war veteran. Blanche: the upper class Southern Belle of the USAââ¬â¢s French-colonial past. When Stanley and Blanche meet it is clear that their two ideologies cannot live side by side, and a battle ensues for dominance. Stanley wins the first battle, after convincing Stela to ââ¬Å"come backâ⬠to him after hitting her, and the field of battle shifts to Mitch. Initially, by means of her deceptive seduction and emotional appeal, Mitch falls for Blanche, yet Stanley manages to convince Mitch to seek the truth from Blanche. Indeed, he does and Mitch adopts Stanleyââ¬â¢s speech patterns and physical movements in scene 9, a maneuver which is s ymbolic of Stanley having successfully exerted his influence over Mitch: he speaks monosyllabically (ââ¬Å"Me. Mitchâ⬠) and with interrogative statements (ââ¬Å"Why?â⬠, ââ¬Å"Are you out of your mind?â⬠and ââ¬Å"Do we have to have that fan on?â⬠). Eventually, Mitch ââ¬Å"ripsâ⬠the ââ¬Å"lanternâ⬠off the lamp, symbolically violating Blanche and prefiguring the subsequent rape scene by shattering her illusions and pretences. After Stanley has taken Mitch from Blanche, she has lost everything and appears in clothes which are ââ¬Å"soiledâ⬠and ââ¬Å"crumpledâ⬠, symbolic of her stained purity and helplessness. Ultimately, Williams creates Mitch as someone who means well concerning Blanche, and who is one of the few characters to empathise with her, however he never realistically does anything to help her. His well-meaning yet powerless position is epitomised by the end stage directions as he is ââ¬Å"sobbingâ⬠while Blanche leaves, and in his failed attempt to criticise Stanley (ââ¬Å"Youâ⬠¦bragâ⬠¦bragâ⬠¦bragâ⬠¦bull!â⬠) This criticism may well have carried some weight and helped Blanche, yet it is castrated by Mitchââ¬â¢s inability to even formulate a sentence. Mitch was Blancheââ¬â¢s last opportunity to detach herself from the Old World of the colonial South and attach herself to the modern, post-industrialist world in the aftermath of World War II, a world in which traditional gender roles had shifted. Once this opportunity is missed, Blanche is doomed to fade away into the abyss of obscurity and her institutionalisation becomes inevitable as she is left insane, alone, unstable, and unsupported.
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