It was the primary change made by her in new south. Light constantly made her awkward and apprehensive. Light is image of truth and reality. Blanche does not go under direct light. Mitch needs to switch on the light with the goal that he can get a reasonable perspective of Blanche, she says that she need enchantment in her life, Which implies that she needed to control reality. She wants to live in a conjured up universe. Another image is cigarettes: Blanche always smoke cigarette which demonstrates her another shortcoming. Blanche is an exceptionally solid case of a dualistic character. She has two altogether different sides. As an all around reared Southern woman she is considerate, refined and exceptionally aware of her picture. She gives an open impression of high good principles and social respectability, and cases to be profoundly annoyed with brutality and unkindness; her sister Stella depicts her as fragile. However in all actuality she is sexually wanton and a dipsomaniac, and utilizations being a tease and temptation to control everyone around her. When she finds that her young spouse is cross-sexual her unfeeling and forceful conduct drives him to suicide. She is tormented by this and frequented by the melody that was playing when he slaughtered herself; in her mind the tune closes with a shot, and she legitimizes her drinking as an endeavor to rub out the sound.
3) Romance vs. realism:
This play is matching of desire and demise. Blanche takes A Streetcar Named Desire in the beginning and cemetery in the later half. Where Desire implies life and Cemetery implies demise. Blanche came to New Orleans with brimming with wants yet subsequent to remaining at Stella house, her trip of life swings to burial ground. Blanche dependably stayed in the fictional universe which at last made her to endure.
4) Relation between sex and