Papers On Theater
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David Henry Hwang’s “M. Butterfly”
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This 5 page report discusses
the fact that Illusion and reality are the key ingredients in
Chinese-American playwright David Henry Hwang’s “M. Butterfly”
(1988) and those factors are what have had the greatest influence
in terms of how his work has been interpreted by audiences seeing
it performed or its film adaptation for which Hwang wrote the
screenplay. The story itself is one that serves as a
deconstruction of the illusions and realities of West versus
East, hetero- versus homosexual realities, and what is “proper”
and what is taboo. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: BWhwang.rtf
David Mamet/Oleanna
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A 5 page essay about David Mamet's evocative play, Oleanna, which can be read on several different levels. One of the principal ways in which it can be addressed is in the way that Mamet presents the world of higher education through the character of John, the egotistical college professor. No additional sources cited.
Filename: khmamet.wps
Deaf Theatre
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A 5 page paper which provides a general summary and informational outline on deaf theatre. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TGdeafth.rtf
Death of a Salesman
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A paper which looks at various aspects of Miller's play, including Willy as the antithesis of the tragic hero, the role of flashback in the narrative, and the socio-political comment which Miller makes on the "American dream".
Filename: JLdthsles.rtf
Death of a Salesman and the American Dream
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A 4 page paper which examines how Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman can be seen as an indictment against the American Dream. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAadsee.rtf
Death of a Salesman.
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(5 pp). Death of a Salesman gives different
insights and different meanings to the American
dream of success and shows what can happen when the
dream is false, distorted or unfulfilled. The
American dream was in serious trouble for Willy
Loman and his family because of his fervent
pursuit of success, wealth and status. He believed
in the myth that success was based on popularity,
personality and personal attractiveness. "Be liked
and you will never want." (p.33) and "Riding on a
smile and a shoeshine," and ". . . personality
always wins the day." (p. 65) are examples of
those deceptions.
Bbliography lists 3 sources.
Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Bibliography lists 3 sources. BBdthSal.doc
Filename: BBdthSal.doc
Death of a Salesman.
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(5 pp) Death of a Salesman gives different
insights and different meanings to the American
dream of success and shows what can happen when
the dream is false, distorted or unfulfilled. The
American dream was in serious trouble for Willy
Loman and his family because of his fervent
pursuit of success, wealth and status. He believed
the myth that success was based on popularity,
personality and personal attractiveness. "Be liked
and you will never want" (.33), and "Riding on a
smile and a shoeshine," and ". . . personality
always wins the day" ( 65) are examples of those
deceptions. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: BBdthSR.doc
Death of a Salesman/Pursuit of Happyness
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A 5 page essay that compares Arthur Miller’s play “Death of a Salesman” and the 2006 film “The Pursuit of Happyness” (directed by Gabriele Muccino for Columbia Pictures) present two very different portrayals of fatherhood. The protagonists for both works are salesman, both fathers, both down-and-out and desperate to succeed. But they are also extremely different, in that Miller’s Willy Loman has a false sense of values and no sense of his own identity, while the film’s protagonist, Chris Gardner displays a firm sense of values and also demonstrates that he knows his own potential and abilities. In both cases, how the men view themselves is a legacy that is transmitted to their sons. Bibliography lists 1 source.
Filename: khdospoh.rtf
Death Of A Salesman: Conflict Between Father And Son
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A 5 page paper. Miller's play is a commentary on the American way of life and on the preoccupation with wealth and influence. The story revolves around the conflict between Willy Loman, an older traveling salesman, and his oldest son, Biff, who was a exceptional football player in high school. Many critics have said that Biff is both a reflection and an amplification of Willy. The paper discusses the conflict between them and analyzes the different causes of it. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
Filename: PGdeath2.wps
Death of a Salesman: Meaning
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A 5 page paper which discusses the literal and symbolic
meanings of the title 'Death of a Salesman,' the play by Arthur Miller. In the literal
meaning we are truly presented with the death of one man, a salesman, Willy Loman. In
the symbolic meaning we see the death of the salesman as representative of the death of
the American dream, or the ridding of illusion as it applies to the American dream. No
additional sources cited.
Filename: RAsalesmn1.rtf
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