Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The tradition of social drama
- 3 The early plays
- 4 All My Sons
- 5 Death of a Salesman and the poetics of Arthur Miller
- 6 Conscience and community in An Enemy of the People and The Crucible
- 7 A View from the Bridge
- 8 The Holocaust, the Depression, and McCarthyism
- 9 Miller's 1970s "power" plays
- 10 Miller in the eighties
- 11 Miller in the nineties
- 12 Arthur Miller and the cinema
- 13 Arthur Miller's Fiction
- 14 Critic, criticism, critics
- 15 Arthur Miller
- Index
9 - Miller's 1970s "power" plays
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The tradition of social drama
- 3 The early plays
- 4 All My Sons
- 5 Death of a Salesman and the poetics of Arthur Miller
- 6 Conscience and community in An Enemy of the People and The Crucible
- 7 A View from the Bridge
- 8 The Holocaust, the Depression, and McCarthyism
- 9 Miller's 1970s "power" plays
- 10 Miller in the eighties
- 11 Miller in the nineties
- 12 Arthur Miller and the cinema
- 13 Arthur Miller's Fiction
- 14 Critic, criticism, critics
- 15 Arthur Miller
- Index
Summary
The 1970s was a decade of nearly devastating turmoil for the United States from which in many ways it is still recovering. The American incursion into Cambodia leading to the bloody protests at Kent State University, the withdrawal from Vietnam after years of divisive protest at home, South Vietnam's eventual collapse, Watergate, and the resignation of a president under disgrace all shook the very foundation of a United States that was anything but united. Miller created three works for the stage in the seventies that confronted and expanded upon the cultural divisiveness so prevalent then and still present today. The Creation of the World and Other Business and The American Clock each offered reflections on the issue of authenticating existence by assuming individual and collective responsibility for our various internal failures. These two plays, written in the early seventies, work well with the hard-hitting and existentially disturbing play, The Archbishop's Ceiling (written in 1977 but only to receive its final, revised form in 1984), which confronts the questionable effects of our attempts to exercise that authenticity in a world that has lost moral control of its own destiny.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Arthur Miller , pp. 139 - 151Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1997
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