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If you're racing to get through this play, you may be tempted to skip the stage directions—you
know, all that stuff written in italics at the beginning of each scene, and interspersed
with the dialogue? If you do, though, you'll be missing out on one of this play's main
motifs.
Take a minute to think about the way this play is staged. There's a fluidity between
inside and outside.
What I mean is, if you were watching this play, you'd see both the interior of the Kowalskis'
apartment and the street outside. At the same time. It's like Williams has removed the boundary
between the outside world and what's going on inside. Through the staging, he sets up
a space where there's no safety, no place where Blanche (or anyone else) can hide from
cruel reality. In A Streetcar Named Desire, the home is not a sanctuary for women.
Although the fluidity between inside and outside appears many times during this play, the most
shocking example is at the end of Scene Ten when the back wall of the apartment becomes
transparent, showing the shadows of the violent activity in the street. Moments later, inside
the apartment, Stanley rapes Blanche.
So what should you remember about this motif? Remember that the fluidity between inside
and outside reinforces Williams' social criticism—and our favorite theme—which says that there's
something wrong with a society in which a single woman's only recourse is either a man,
or a complete departure from reality.