A View from the Bridge Essays

  • A View From The Bridge

    1263 Words  | 3 Pages

    A view from the bridge was written by Arthur Miller in 1955.It is set in Brooklyn in the city of New York in a place called Red Hook. Here there is a great emphasis on Italian migrant families. At that time people where coming from Sicily and they where running away from a life of poverty. Mainly it was the men who moved to America to find a well paid job and then send the money they made to their families back in Sicily. Miller learnt about Italian migrants and there struggles when he worked

  • A View from The Bridge

    4556 Words  | 10 Pages

    A View from The Bridge Discuss the importance of stage directions in Arthur Millers ‘A View From The Bridge’ and what they reveal about the character of Eddie Carbone. Stage directions are very important in drama and this is evident in Arthur Millers ‘A View From the Bridge’. Stage directions give actors and directors character motivation and this allows actors to create believable characters and explain a characters actions and feelings. They also highlight characters emotions that are

  • A View From The Bridge

    1211 Words  | 3 Pages

    A View From The Bridge “Whatever happened we all done it and don’t you ever forget it.” The play A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller is set in New York in the 1950s. During this period of time there were many illegal immigrants from Eastern Europe moving in to America. This was due to the depression caused by the Second World War. The depression caused a lack of work, many people started to migrate to America where there were many jobs. Due to the mass immigration America started to

  • A View From The Bridge

    1075 Words  | 3 Pages

    A View From The Bridge Arthur Miller clearly uses different aspects of his play “A view from the bridge” to create dramatic tension. His central character Eddie is the person around who has a great deal of conflict revolving around him. He creates a lot of tensions and each scene of conflict becomes stronger than one before. He lives with his wife and her niece Catherine. Eddie is very protective of Catherine and wants her to get a good education. He also seems to be in love with Catherine

  • A View from the Bridge

    2018 Words  | 5 Pages

    A View from the Bridge. 'Justice is very important here' is spoken by Alfieri in his opening speech. Alfieri is a lawyer representing the official legal system of America. He also acts as a narrator, commentator who is almost like a bystander watching the events but remains powerless to have any impact on them. This is very similar to the chorus, featured in tragedies from ancient Greek playwright, who are a group of on lookers watching and commenting on events but are unable to act upon

  • A View From the Bridge

    3444 Words  | 7 Pages

    Eddie Carbone is an American-Sicilian man working in Brooklyn. He works as a longshoreman: carrying crates and goods from the ships. He is quite a large man. His job requires him to be strong and a good worker. In other words he is very masculine. He is an ordinary man. He lives with his wife and niece, whom he treats like a daughter, and like all good men should do, he works every day to provide them with enough money to survive on. Eddie is a man’s man. He lives within a close-knit community of

  • A View from the Bridge

    736 Words  | 2 Pages

    A View from the Bridge *Works Cited Not Included The first scene begins with a fight. Obviously this introduction is indicative of some kind of intense emotion to follow. An aura of passionate emotions continues to surface throughout the play. The mood is set immediately. The audience knows that whatever is to come will be fiery and fervent. Ironically, the opening scene is the climax itself. By using this structure, the author gets right to the point that Eddie Carbone is a self-destructive character

  • A View From the Bridge

    634 Words  | 2 Pages

    husband and member of the community, but has now turned bad. He has treated Catherine like his own daughter, and has become overprotective. “I don’t understand you; she’s seventeen years old, you gonna keep her in the house all her life?” This quote from Beatrice shows that Eddie needs Catherine close...

  • A View From The Bridge Analysis

    702 Words  | 2 Pages

    of the modern day society, however, this may not be how it always was. Travelling back in time, to the Red Hook community of Brooklyn, circa 1950s, we are able to see the societal expectations of a women at the time through Arthur Miller’s A View from the Bridge. The two female characters, Catherine and Beatrice, play crucial roles in the play and are essential to the tragic storyline of Eddie and his downfall. However, Arthur Miller has skillfully been able to show the lives and societal expectations

  • A View From the Bridge by Miller

    3949 Words  | 8 Pages

    A View From the Bridge by Miller "A view from the bridge" is a play scripted by Arthur Miller in 1955. The play is based in a city called Brooklyn which is situated in the state of New York. A view from the bridge is presented to the audience by a prominent character called Alfieri. Alfieri is the most significant character in the play because he is known as a good lawyer, a good friend to Eddie Carbone (a longshoreman)

  • A View From The Bridge Essay

    588 Words  | 2 Pages

    How important are Miller's language choices and use of stage directions in aiming the audience to view Eddie as a tragic hero in the play ‘A View from the Bridge’? The play ‘A View from the Bridge’ is Arthur Miller’s modern-day revamp of a Greek tragedy. Alongside creating the character of Alfieri to abide with the traditional chorus role, he toys with fate, a feature steeped deeply in generic Greek tragedies. However, the aspect that is truly reminiscent of these dramas is the flawed protagonist

  • A View From The Bridge Analysis

    1002 Words  | 3 Pages

    Theatre Elements of A View From the Bridge The play A View from the Bridge, directed by and text by Playwright Arthur Miller is a realistic and loud production. The production is performed at John Jay College at The Gerald Lynch Theatre. The script of the play is realistic and powerfull in part by its telling of the assumed family roles of the 20th century and how love with jealousy can lead to ones own death. The play is spoken in a Brooklyn, New York accent. The cast were culling and defyingly

  • Justice in A View from the Bridge

    1761 Words  | 4 Pages

    Justice in A View from the Bridge Arthur Miller is now regarded as one of the world’s greatest dramatists. In his plays he explores the struggles of the ordinary man against authority and insurmountable odds. Miller's own struggle therefore with this issue is present in ‘A View from the Bridge’ as he, like the characters in his plays (such as Eddie Carbone), was faced with the problem of choosing to be American or not, specifically by naming names of people who were doing (what were considered

  • A View From The Bridge Analysis

    1324 Words  | 3 Pages

    A View From The Bridge by Arthur Miller The play "A view from the Bridge" by Arthur Miller is based on a real Brooklyn community in New York, which is largely about Italian immigrants in USA in the 1940s/50s. The overall story line is very true to life as many immigrants were entering America illegally and this still happens today in America and in other countries like United Kingdom. Immigrants were forced to hide and keep quiet because if they were discovered they

  • A View From The Bridge Analysis

    1089 Words  | 3 Pages

    If you were directing the play "a view from a bridge" what advice would you give to the actor playing Eddie about his character? Use quotations and close reference to the text. "A view from a bridge" is a play with five main characters. Eddie and Beatrice are married whilst they adopt Catherine, who is Eddie's niece. Marco and Rudolfo are their cousins who come to stay from Sicily. They are both illegal immigrants. A situation in the play occurs where Eddie becomes possessive of Catherine

  • A View from the Bridge by Miller

    1620 Words  | 4 Pages

    Miller’s A View from the Bridge, originally written in 1956 as a one act play, has many features of a classic Greek tragedy. It is set in the Italian-American neighbourhood, situated in Red Hook, near Brooklyn Bridge in New York. It is in this community Miller chooses to dramatise themes of conflict, betrayal, love and obsession. The underlying omerta is present throughout the play and is the reason for the conflict as it is defied by Eddie Carbone, the Italian longshoreman, who destroys himself

  • A View From Teh Bridge

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    A View from the Bridge - Carbone family and community in scene 1 [-red-] Eddie is very protective of Catherine. Eddie seems very concerned as to the welfare of Catherine. "Where you goin' all dressed up?" "where you goin'?" "whats going on?" "I think its too short ain't it?" Eddie doesn't want Catherine to grow up "you're walking wavy!" He is concerned that she might get sexually assaulted or may be taken advantage of by men. Catherine disapproves of his protectiveness and nearly starts to cry

  • A View from the Bridge - Setting

    2734 Words  | 6 Pages

    A view from the bridge - Setting. The play "A view from the bridge" is set in the1950's, a tragedy about the lives of some Italian immigrants, whose paths cross, ending in death, separation and tragedy. The play is full of important events, and places, and it is its places we are looking at. Places are used by the author, Arthur Miller, to symbolize, represent, and portray a range of views, people, and actions. Certain places, like Italy, are mentioned lots, but no scenes themselves take

  • Analysis Of A View From A Bridge

    2146 Words  | 5 Pages

    A view from a bridge is a play set in the early 50’s in New York near the Brooklyn Bridge. It’s a dramatic tragedy and it is here we’re introduced to Eddie Carbone and his niece, Catherine. In the play the audience is able to observe their relationship and watch it change. Towards the start we perceive a normal fatherly-daughterly relationship, where occasionally we may think Eddie is slightly over protective but at this point there is nothing abnormal about it. But as the play progresses we begin

  • Tension in A View from the Bridge

    1579 Words  | 4 Pages

    Eddie gets upset and angry when he’s wrong and especially when the person who gets it right is Rodolpho. Eddie doesn’t like it when he’s challenged and he hates it every time Rodolpho speaks. Beatrice, the ‘peacemaker’, tries to stop any bad things from taking place and diverts the conversation, ‘Your wife is gettin’ the money alright, Marco,’ by butting in. We already know that there is tension in the household before this because Eddie says to Catherine, ‘You’re walking wavy’, which shows that