Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A Streetcar Named Desire-
Theatricality in Stanley
- Costume
- Scene 1
- 'roughly dressed in blue denim work clothes'
- Working class identity
- 'bowling jacket'
- Link to gaming e.g. bowling, poker
- 'removes his shirt'
- Upon meeting Blanche, he asserts his masculinity and dominance
- Scene 3
- 'coloured shirts, solid blues, a purple,
a red-and-white check, a light green'
- Contrast to the white of Blanche's clothing
- 'wet polka dot drawers'
- Sexual image
- 'half-dressed'
- Scene 4
- 'an undershirt and grease-stained
seersucker pants'
- Stains= corruption
for Blanche
- Stanley represents the corrupt
nature of the New America
- Scene 8
- 'ripping off his shirt'
- Like an ape
- Asserts his male dominance
- 'brilliant silk bowling shirt'
- Represents vitality of New America
- Scene 10
- 'vivid green silk bowling shirt'
- Green is sometimes associated with the military, greed and American money
- Linked to the industrialisation and New
America- perhaps green connotes freshness?
- 'he unbuttons his shirt'
- 'he starts removing his shirt'
- 'silk pyjamas'
- Linked to his wedding night
- Reminder of his infidelity to Stella via raping Blanche
- 'brilliant silk pyjamas' - 'the tasselled sash'
- He ends most scenes in fewer clothes-
dominant manhood
- Scene 5
- 'green and scarlet silk bowling shirt'
- Scarlet linked to sexual desire
- Evaluative comments
- 'In the first half of the 19th century, due to the
influence of French fashion, crimson was
largely replaced with the cheaper amaranth'
- Amaranth is a flower that was
believed to grow on Mount
Olympus and never died
- Link to Elysian Fields- Greek mythology
- Red represents desire and danger
(Stanley) and white represents
purity (Blanche)
- The Polish flag
- While it is very doubtful that Williams was
considering the connotations of the colour
amaranth, as a contemporary audience
and reader, we may interpret the fact that
Stanley's home country, Poland, has a red
and white flag, perhaps highlighting the
conflict between Blanche and Stanley, as is
highlighted in the play
- Props, symbols and sounds
- Whiskey
- Ape/ caveman
- Lower life form compared
to Blanche's aristocracy
- 'richly feathered male bird'
- Cockerel with his hens
- Link to Steve's joke in Scene 3
- Trumpets and drums from the Four Deuces
- Cat screeching
- Stanley toys with Blanche like a cat with a mouse
- Red-stained package of meat
- Red= desire/lust
- Game imagery
- Poker
- Bowling
- Phallic images
- Beer bottles
- Locomotive