РефератыИностранный языкA A View From The BridgeArthur Miller Essay

A View From The BridgeArthur Miller Essay

A View From The Bridge-Arthur Miller Essay, Research Paper


Jo Hawkins


Assessment 2 Semester 1 1998


?A playwright with a social conscience?.


Analyse the ways in which Arthur Miller presents Eddie Carboni as a victim of


Brooklyn in the 1950?s.


In his play, A View From the Bridge ,(1955), Arthur Miller (1915-) portrays the


protagonist, Eddie Carboni, an uneducated Italian-American longshoreman, as a victim of


American society in the 1950?s. Set in Red Hook, an industrial area of Brooklyn, Eddie


lives with his wife, Beatrice and her sister?s child, his niece Catherine, of whom he is


unwittingly over protective. Life is hard but even until the arrival of two illegal


immigrants, Marco and Rodolpho, who are relatives of Beatrice. When Rodolpho forms a


relationship with Catherine, Eddie is threatened in a way he can neither articulate nor even


acknowledge. He does his best to destroy this relationship in order to preserve his


unchanging lifestyle and when his attempts fail, he calls the immigration department and


turns informer. When challenged by Marco, Eddie fights to uphold his honour and is


killed. Through this conflict, Miller explores the issues of gender roles and justice within


American Society. This is achieved by the skilful use of theatrical conventions including


character and setting. As Miller?s succeeds in presenting Eddie Carboni as a victim of


society he proves himself to be ?a playwright with a social conscience?


Miller explores the changing gender roles in Brooklyn of the 1950?s, detailing the demise


of patriarchy and Eddie?s reactions to this dramatic social change. This confusion,


accentuated by the arrival of two submarines, Marco and Rodolpho, serves to highlight


the underlying sexual tension between Eddie, Catherine and Beatrice. This tension is


present from the beginning of the play as Eddie laments, ?you?re walking? wavy? to


Catherine , acknowledging her sexuality , his jealousy apparent as he voices his


disapproval. The admission of Catherine into the work force is hard for Eddie to accept


as her maturity becomes harder for him to ignore. His pride also begins to faulter as he


learns that Catherine earns more money in her first year as a stenographer, than he does as


an experienced longshoreman. Beatrice recognises Eddies hidden desires before he or


Catherine are aware of it, this becoming apparent in the first act as she snaps at Eddie ?I?m


not mad, you?re the one is mad?. With the arrival of Marco and Rodolpho, Eddie


struggles to uphold his position as head of the family. Rodolpho possesses an unconscious


femininity that patriarchal Eddie does not understand and his developing relationship with


Catherine causes much jealousy and resentment. As Eddie struggles with his own gender


identity and strong feelings for Catherine he turns to the law in an attempt to find justice.


The differences between justice and American law is explored by Miller through Eddie?s


moral and social conflict as he tries desperately to stop Catherine from marrying


Rodolpho. The play begins with an exposition from Alferi, a middle class lawyer who acts


as an impartial commentator for most of the play. Alferi connotes that the


American-Italian population has a disrespect for written law with roots that spread deep


into their Italian ancestry. Consequently, he acknowledges their own system of family law


and it?s Mafia parallels. Miller recognises the strength and validity of family law, the


nature of which remained incomprehensible to American society. The differences between


the two cultures are highlighted and criticised as Alferi reminisces, ?Oh, there were many


here who were justly shot by unjust men.? Eddie, blinded by a passion for Catherine he


cannot understand, does not recognise the differences between these cultures and alienates


himself from both of them by refusing to compromise between both. Informing the


immigration bureau of Rodolpho and

Marco was not an illegal act , Miller simply presents


it as immoral. Eddie becomes a victim of both societies as he attempts to conform to


both.


Miller uses the other characters to provide drama and further the plot, limiting their


development as complex individuals. In this way, Miller?s forms a true portrait of Eddie


as the betrayer, marginalising those whom he betrays. It is through Beatrice that Eddie?s


desires become articulated and Catherine becomes aware of the reasons he resents


Rodolpho. Catherine?s own loyalty for Eddie makes her feel guilty for loving Rodolpho


and when she recognises his misplaced passion she gains enough strength to leave. Eddie


blames the immigrants for the dramatic social change he experiences, not recognising that


they were only the catalyst. He never accepts them and therefore cannot understand them,


a folly that leads to the eventual communication breakdown. Rodolpho is well liked by all


who know him therefore Eddie?s rejection of him is considered unjust and emphasises his


apparent jealousy. Marco, however is very quiet and restrained until the plays tragic


conclusion in which he makes damning accusations of Eddie in front of the whole


Neighbourhood when he shouts, ?That one! I accuse that one!?. The strength of this


words have more impact as they contrast Marcos usual character and indicate his great


anger, justifying his later vendetta. When Eddie refuses to conform to unwritten civil law


he is victimised by his own family and those he had helped in the past.


Setting is used in A View from the Bridge to create contrast between the American and


Italian cultures and to make the themes more potent. Rodolpho does not conform to the


male Italian stereotype and is therefore unacceptable to Eddie. As a blonde man, set in a


tight knit society of Italian-Americans he serves as an example of the new generation of


men more in touch with their feminine sides and less dependent on patriarchy as a control


mechanism. On arrival into America, Rodolpho and Marco are awed by Eddie and


Beatrice?s ?clean, sparse, homely? workers flat. The audience is therefore sympathetic to


these immigrants and their predicament. The fact that they had broken United States law


is marginalised to such an extent that the conservative American audience of the 1950?s


that Miller wrote his play for would reject their own morality, at least for the plays


duration. By encouraging the audience to disregard preconditioned moral standards


concerning illegal immigrants in America, Miller encourages them to sympathise with


Eddie whose own morality is likewise divided.


Miller explores the themes of changing gender roles and justice through victimisation of


the central protagonist, Eddie Carboni due to his moral dilemma. Theatrical conventions


used in his portray include setting and character development. The introduction of the


two illegal immigrants, Rodolpho and Marco proves to be the catalyst for the revelation of


the underlying sexual tension between Eddie, his wife and his niece. The tension is


accentuated as Eddie?s position as head of the household is threatened by Catherine?s new


job and the success of the two submarines in conforming to American society. The


differences between family law and the constitutional law are also explored as it is Eddies


refusal to obey both and make a compromise that causes his own downfall. Miller never


truly develops the other characters into complex individuals but uses them to futher Eddies


own development. The setting is used to contrast the two cultures and the two types of


justice, promoting audience sympathy for the two immigrants Rodolpho and Marco which


leads to a greater understanding of Eddies morality. By gaining audience sympathy and


positioning them to see an different aspect of Brooklyn in the 1950?s, Miller displays a


heightened social conscience as he presents Eddie Carboni as victim of his own rigid


morality.

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