The poker games in A Streetcar Named Desire serve dramatic as well as symbolic functions. The first game brings Stanley's male friends into the apartment, allowing Blanche to meet Mitch. The second gives a reason for Mitch to be present even after he has broken off his relationship with Blanche. Stanley's focus on the poker game and his irritation that Mitch does not take it as seriously as he does provides a foil for Mitch's more sensitive nature.
The poker games are also symbolic. Poker is a game of chance, in the sense that the players cannot control what cards they are dealt, but also one of skill. The principal skill lies in bluffing, in covering up one's disadvantages and pretending to the other players that one holds better cards than is actually the case. Although Blanche is excluded from the poker game, this is a powerful metaphor for the way in which she lives and for how she conducts her relationship with Mitch. Stanley, being a more serious poker-player than Mitch, sees through...
(The entire section contains 4 answers and 985 words.)
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