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A Streetcar Named Desire Scene 3 Summary

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These A-Level English Literature notes on A Streetcar Named Desire, Scene 3, are packed with the kind of sophisticated, exam-ready analysis that helped me secure an A*. This document offers a detailed breakdown of the scene's key events — including the iconic poker night, the volatile power dynamics between Stanley and Stella, and the first real connection between Blanche and Mitch. Each moment is explored with deep literary analysis, drawing out nuanced interpretations of character, symbolism, and stagecraft. The notes delve into key quotes, unpacking language and dramatic technique in a way that goes far beyond surface-level commentary, showing how to hit those top assessment objectives with clarity and precision.

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June 19, 2025
Number of pages
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Summary:
-​ Stanley and his boys are playing poker
-​ Mitch explains how his mother is sick and he needs to go home
-​ Stanley is very angry
-​ Mitch goes to the bathroom
-​ Stella and Blanche come back and Blanche is concerned about her looks
-​ They come in the house and stella complains how it is 2:30 yet they’re still playing the
game
-​ Stanley tries to tell her to go upstairs with Eunice
-​ He slaps her thigh in front of everyone and she explains to Blanche how she hates it
when he does that
-​ Blanche doesn’t care and just explains how she needs a bath to calm down her nerves
-​ When she goes to the toilet, Mitch comes out and is mesmerised by her beauty
-​ They briefly discuss Mitch’s lowly job and how Stanley is the only one who is likely to get
far
-​ Then they make fun of the men’s fat wives and Stanley tells them to shush
-​ Blanche puts on some music and Stanley tells her to take it off
-​ Mitch comes to Blanche and they share a cigarette
-​ She tells him her surname
-​ She gives him a light bulb cover so her bare face can’t be seen
-​ Stanley calls Mitch
-​ Blanche explains how she is a school teacher for english
-​ Stanley is drunk and angry and throws an instrument out of the window
-​ Stella shouts at him for being drunk
-​ He beats her up and everyone is alarmed
-​ The men control Stanley and place him on the bed
-​ They put him in the shower and he recollects himself
-​ He screams for Stella and wants her back
-​ Eunice ain’t letting him have her back
-​ She comes back down the stairs and his face is on her belly
-​ Mitch sees Blanche and they sit on the stairs together

Quotes:
-​ “There is a picture of Van Gogh’s of a billboard- parlour at night”
➔​ No subtlety whats so ever, direct and harsh
➔​ Multitude of colours
➔​ Bright, vibrant and harsh- reflects Stanley’s nature and New Orleans
➔​ Everything about this is harsh
-​ “The poker players-....... wear coloured shirts, solid blues, a purple, a
red-and-white check, a light green, and they are men at the peak of their physical
manhood, as course and direct and powerful as the primary colours”
➔​ Multitude of colours are used
➔​ The primary, bold colours are strong and attention grabbing

, ➔​ These colours connote vitality, dominance, and primal energy, reinforcing the raw
physicality and unrefined masculinity of the poker players- especially Stanley, who
embodies these traits most clearly
➔​ Primary colours are basic and foundational- this mirrors how Williams presents these
men as elemental, almost primitive in their instincts
➔​ Williams sets up a hyper-masculine atmosphere, which becomes crucial as it clashes
with Blanche’s refined, fragile femininity later in the scene
➔​ Williams is preparing the audience for a clash of forces- masculinity vs. femininity, brute
force vs. delicate sensibility, realism vs. illusion
-​ “You are as fresh as a daisy. One that has been picked for a few days”
➔​ The petals of daisies are white which connote innocence and purity
➔​ However, Blanche outlines the daisy has been picked suggesting her innocence is
fleeting and she is wearing apart
➔​ She has been at the Kowalski’s house “for a few days” which may be Williams implying
that Stanley has worn Blanche out and is picking at her past
➔​ Her beauty is fleeting and she is falling apart and being attacked by others- notably
Stanley
-​ “He lurches up and tosses some watermelon rinds on the floor”
➔​ Resembles an animal
-​ “Stanley gives a loud whack of his hand on her thigh”
➔​ He is physically and sexually abusive and has no shame as he acts in such a way
around his friends
➔​ He lacks respect
➔​ “loud” conveys the impact of the hit, he isn’t subtle
➔​ Abusive, dominant male
-​ “I got a sick mother. She don’t sleep till I come home at night.”
➔​ His personal life is quite sad but Stanley doesn’t care
-​ “Aw, for god’s sake, go home, then!”
-​ “Well, you can hear me and I said to hush up!”
-​ “This is my house and I’ll talk as much as I want to!
➔​ Stella is asserting some dominance and authority here
➔​ Stanley doesn’t appreciate this and believes Blanche has caused his wife to become
more vocal so he lashes out on her
➔​ Her tone is forceful and assertive
➔​ As a member of the new south, she feels confident to break previous social norms that
required women to be passive in the face of abuse and injustice
➔​ The possessive pronoun “my” challenges Stanley’s perceives authority- something he
doesn’t appreciate
➔​ Williams uses possessive language and a defiant tone to show Stella’s moment of
resistance against Stanley’s control
➔​ However, its power is undercut by the broader context of the play, where patriarchal
dominance prevails
➔​ Stella’s refusal to be silenced (“I’ll talk as much as I want to!”) pushes against traditional
expectations that women should be submissive and deferential to men
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