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Miller and Middle America: Essays on Arthur Miller and the American Experience [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 162 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 217x141x12 mm, kaal: 213 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Mar-2007
  • Kirjastus: University Press of America
  • ISBN-10: 0761837108
  • ISBN-13: 9780761837107
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 162 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 217x141x12 mm, kaal: 213 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 09-Mar-2007
  • Kirjastus: University Press of America
  • ISBN-10: 0761837108
  • ISBN-13: 9780761837107
Teised raamatud teemal:
Miller and Middle America features eleven essays by some of the world's leading Arthur Miller scholars on the playwright's contribution to the literary life of the United States. The essays explore Miller's role as a playwright in relation to American society, both celebrating the land and its heritage, while cautioning the country and its people. The collection provides an examination of Miller's depiction of various roles and professions, such as doctors and carpenters, as well as institutions, such as marriage. Other topics addressed include the language of Middle America, the changing landscape of the country, and even Middle-American political correctness. Finally, the volume offers an examination of Miller's use of memory and reality in his plays to explore and assign meaning to self and society.

Arvustused

Uniformly accessible, informative, and well written, these 11 essays, virtually all of them by accomplished Miller scholars, explore the thematic filaments that tie Miller's plays to the moderately conservative values associated with Middle America. The book is marked by a commendable, refreshing breadth: it succeeds in offering enduring insights (to specialists and non-specialists alike) on Miller's unsurpassable power to lay bare the roots of the cultural landscape. Summing Up: RECOMMENDED. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. -- H.I. Einsohn, Middlesex Community College * CHOICE * Miller and Middle America.... is a welcome and valuable addition to students and scholars interested in Miller, American drama, and, indeed, American culture itself. -- Matthew Roudané, Professor and Chair of the Department of English, Georgia State University This book collects eleven essays by scholars of Arthur Miller, almost all of whom write from long and deep acquaintance with the plays and the playwright. The essays are a major contribution to our understanding of Arthur Miller, and of twentieth-century Middle America as well. They apply a wide range of critical perspectives, theories, and methodologies to the whole body of Miller's work, shedding particular light on the cultural context of the plays as revealed in Miller's treatment of such subjects as McCarthyist scapegoating, doctors, marriage, and murder, and they bring fresh insights into Miller's perennial thematic concerns, such as memory, urbanite longing for the frontier, and the nature of reality. -- Brenda Murphy, University of Connecticut, Board of Trustees, Distinguished Professor of English America lay at the heart of Arthur Miller's drama. He explored its past, challenged its values, held it to account. These original and striking essays come from the heart of America and are a reminder of what we lost when Miller died, and what remains to us in plays which never cease to move and disturb, and which reward the kind of critical engagement evidenced in this compelling book. -- Christopher Bigsby, Professor of American Studies at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England Uniformly accessible, informative, and well written, these 11 essays, virtually all of them by accomplished Miller scholars, explore the thematic filaments that tie Miller's plays to the moderately conservative values associated with Middle America. The book is marked by a commendable, refreshing breadth: it succeeds in offering enduring insights (to specialists and non-specialists alike) on Miller's unsurpassable power to lay bare the roots of the cultural landscape. Summing Up: RECOMMENDED. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers. -- H.I. Einsohn, Middlesex Community College * CHOICE *

Preface vii
Acknowledgments xv
Arthur Miller: Guardian of the Dream of America 1
STEVEN R. CENTOLA
Hegemony, Hatred and the Scapegoat Mechanism in Playing for Time and The Crucible 15
LEWIS LIVESAY
Arthur Miller's Clara: An Interrogation of Middle American Political Correctness 31
PAULA T. LANGTEAU
"Physician Heal Thysel': Arthur Miller's Portrayal of Doctors 41
STEPHEN A. MARINO
Miller, Marriage, and Middle America: An Uneasy Embrace 55
CARLOS CAMPO
Arthur Miller and the Language of Middle America 71
GEORGE P. CASTELITTO
Figuring our Past and Present in Wood: Wood Imagery in Arthur Miller's The Crucible and Death of a Salesman 79
WILLIAM SMITH
Damn Yankee! Leroy Hamilton Crafts Wood with Passion and Honesty, but Who in Modern America Cares? 89
WILLIAM SMITH
"[ S]omewhere down deep where the sources are": Traces of the Snyder/Gray Murder Trial of 1927 in Death of a Salesman? 99
FRANK BERGMANN
The Late Plays of Arthur Miller: Problematizing the Real 107
ASHIS SENGUPTA
The Dangers of Memory in Arthur Miller's I Can't Remember Anything 125
SUSAN C.W. ABBOTSON
Notes to Preface 135
Index 137
Contributors 143


Paula T. Langteau is the campus Dean of the University of Wisconsin-Marinette. She was the founding Vice President of The Arthur Miller Society, its second president, and currently an executive board member.