Monday, January 20, 2020
In A View From The Bridge, Show How The Audiences Opinion Of Eddie :: English Literature
In A View From The Bridge, Show How The Audience's Opinion Of Eddie   Changes.    In A View From The Bridge, Show How The Audience's Opinion Of Eddie  Changes. Refer To The Dramatic Effects Of A Few Key Scenes    A View From The Bridge is a play by Arthur Miller. It was first  produced as a one-act play in verse in 1955, and had the name of An  Italian Tragedy. The play is rooted in the late 1940's when Miller  became interested in the works and lives of the communities of the  longshoremen of New York's Brooklyn Bridge where he had previously  worked. He mentioned it in his autobiography Timebends as 'waterfront  was the Wild West, a desert beyond the law', where was populated and  worked by people who came to America seeking the 'American Dream',  wealth, work and security which their own countries could not  guarantee. This play was set in the 1950's, and at that time America  was seen as the land of opportunity for many people, to start a new  life, escape their past or just for a change, people believed America  held the key. However this was not the case, as immigrants often lived  in the most run down parts of town and found themselves out of work  and with little money to live on the or send their families at home.  Miller was concerned with this living through the depression, which  bankrupted his father, and he saw the effects on the ordinary people.  It was during this time that Miller heard a story from one of his  lawyer friend of 'a longshoremen who had "ratted" to the immigration  bureau on two brothers, his own relatives, who were living illegally  in his very home, in order to break an engagement between one of them  and his niece. ' This story became the model of A View From The Bridge  when he paid a visit to Sicily and saw the awkward situation of the  Italians without work and food, combined with his own experiences of  Italian immigrant workers in Brooklyn. Miller also wanted this play to  be a modern version of a Greek Tragedy, in which a central character  is led by fate towards an inevitable destiny; thus when the final  version of A View From The Bridge was published in 1956, he retained  much of the content of the verse but transformed it into prose. In  this essay I shall discuss how the audience's opinion of the central  character of the play, Eddie Carbone, changes and the factors that  influence them.    In the opening scene, when Eddie first appears on stage, the way he    					    
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