In ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ Williams prominently uses stagecraft to accentuate the
societal shift of America. He highlights the clash of Old and New America and their
incompatibility to co-exist, whilst also exploring gender roles in New America and the
consequences WW2 had on masculinity. Williams altogether explores the everyday lie in
1940s America and its impacts on the citizens trapped in its toxicity.
Evidently, stagecraft is sued to explore the clash between Old and New America, “and the
difficulty for the two worlds to live conjointly.” Stanley’s “blue denim” symbolise his New
American lifestyle and working class labour job. Stanley can be seen as an embodiment of
the American Dream with the belief that no matter ones background, it is still possible to
succeed equally. There was a shift to self-made manhood which can be seen through his
‘blue’ working class clothes. This contrasts with colour symbolism of Blanche’s “white suit
with a fluffy bodice,” accentuating her elitist nature. The motif of Blanche being associated
with “white,” symbolises her Southern Belle status and Old South aristocracy. Her
appearance is described as “incongruous,” to the setting highlighting how she doesn’t fit
within the brutish and “roughly dressed,” New American men. Blanche instead arrives as if
she was at a “cocktail party.” A Southern Belle women, like Blanche, was expected to keep
up-to-date on the latest fashions. Women would have followed weekly newspaper reports in
The Natchez Weekly Democrat to know hoe to dress. Since, Blanche becomes in ‘disbelief’
at the etiquette upheld by New America, it is apparent that these Old Southern values will not
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