Understanding Death of a Salesman: A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical Documents
By (Author) Brenda Murphy
By (author) Susan C. W. Abbotson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
28th February 1999
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Literary essays
Cultural studies
812.52
Hardback
248
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
454g
This collection of social, cultural and historical documents and popular materials, with linking explanations and commentary, should help the reader to study the play "Death of a Salesman" in the context of its time and cultural background. The collected materials are designed to work with the play to highlight inherent conflicts within American society which lie at the heart of "Death of a Salesman", and to explore how the play affects and is affected by social mores and beliefs. Salesmanship and the changing face of business, along with perceptions of sports, gender and families, are explored through selections drawn from a rich variety of sources that help provide forceful evidence of the play's influence. Documents include essays, articles and fiction, which have created or explored the social expectations of a typical American family in the late 1940s; unusual selections such as a self-analysis chart, an obituary and a diary, which help to trace the history of salesmanship form the 19th century to the present day; and advertisements, song lyrics, speeches, how-to books and other readings that promote an interdisciplinary study of the play. More than 70 short primary documents illustrate the cultural, social and historical milieu of the time in which the play takes place. Topics explored under "Cultural Myths and Values" include the Protestant work ethic versus myths of success, the myth of the golden West versus urban myth, and the culture of youth versus the culture of age. A chapter on economic forces provides materials on business versus morality, humanity versus technology, the haves and the have-nots, American business culture, the Depression and how to be an effective salesman. A chapter on family and gender expectations includes documents on the roles of fathers and mothers, providers versus cowboys or playboys, and homemakers versus call girls. A chapter on sports and leisure features documents on amateur football and sports and American values. A final chapter examines the impact of "Death of a Salesman" on American culture. Each chapter is followed by study questions, topics for writing and discussion, and a list of suggested reading.
.,."invaluable resources for new students of theatre, some of whom might well, in years to come, contribute to yet another reassessment of Miller and his work."-Modern Drama
"Murphy and Abbotson have pulled together an assortment of materials that would otherwise be hard to find and put them in an easy-to-use format. [T]his book will come in quite handy at report time."-School Library Journal
...invaluable resources for new students of theatre, some of whom might well, in years to come, contribute to yet another reassessment of Miller and his work.-Modern Drama
Murphy and Abbotson have pulled together an assortment of materials that would otherwise be hard to find and put them in an easy-to-use format. [T]his book will come in quite handy at report time.-School Library Journal
..."invaluable resources for new students of theatre, some of whom might well, in years to come, contribute to yet another reassessment of Miller and his work."-Modern Drama
BRENDA MURPHY has taught at Brown University, St. Lawrence University, and the University of Connecticut, where she is currently Professor of English. She is the author of Miller: Death of a Salesman (1995), as well as a number of articles on Arthur Miller. She is also author of Tennessee Williams and Elia Kazan: A Collaboration in the Theatre (1992), A Realist in the American Theatre: Selected Drama Criticism of William Dean Howells (1992), American Realism and American Drama, 1880-1940 (1987), the Cambridge Companion to American Women Playwrights (forthcoming), and Congressional Theatre: Dramatizing McCarthyism on Stage, Film, and Television (forthcoming). SUSAN C. W. ABBOTSON has taught English for fourteen years, first at the high school level, and more recently at the Rhode Island University. A recent Ph.D., she wrote her dissertation on Arthur Miller and August Wilson. She is also author of the drama section for Resources for Teaching: Literature and Its Writers (1997), The Student Companion to Arthur Miller (forthcoming), and a number of entries for the forthcoming Cambridge Guide for Children's Books.