Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Arthur Miller And View From The Bridge Essays -
  Arthur Miller And View From The Bridge    My initial reaction to the play was absolutely hideous, and my malcontent was  vibrant. I felt that reading A View From The Bridge was a tedious waste of time  and that the play itself was a trivial piece of literature. I found the play to  be neither intriguing nor interesting in the tiniest fashion. The only aspect  that I found mildly intriguing was the character of the protagonist, Eddie    Carbone, as it miraculously appealed to my passion for psychology.    Unfortunately, this enigma of Eddie's constitution only guided me through the  first act, where after, I was completely annoyed and jaded. The two-act horror  is centered on the self-delusion of Eddie Carbone, as he is thrust into a  continuously evolving world in which he will not conform. As his environment is  morphing with the times, Eddie feels compiled to halt it, as his pathetic  temperament will not wallow him to cope with the change, or behave in an orderly  fashion. Eddie begins to veil himself from his love for his eighteen-year-old  niece, Catherine, near the commencement of the play, whence he begins to  criticize her and her perfectly normal actions. "Now don't aggravate me,    Katie, you are walkin' wavy! I don't like the looks they're givin' you  in the candy store. And with them new high heels on the sidewalk --- clack,  clack, clack. The heads are turnin' like windmills."(Page 7) In this quote  we see how Eddie falsely attributes his harshness towards Catherine as  protection, rather than selfishness and his obsession to have her solely to  himself. Another element in Eddie's constitution is his personal honor, which  he tosses aside whence he takes it upon himself to call the Immigration Bureau  to reveal his nemesis and competitor for Catherine's love, Rodolpho, to the  police. This is apparent when Alfieri tells Eddie the consequences to him  calling the Immigration Bureau: "You won't have a friend in the world,    Eddie! Even those who understand will turn against you, even the ones who feel  the same will despise you! Put it out of your mind."(Page 66) These aspects  are portrayed thoroughly expansively in this horrible excuse for a play, and  have a strong effect on the reader. A View From The Bridge is an unusually  single-minded play and an apparent sense of doom shrouds it. The main ideas are  compiled into one story line, and the play is absent of much needed sub-plots.    In my opinion, these vapid aspects were completely pathetic, yet in an uncanny  manner, extremely human. In one way or another, everyone experiences a hint of  self-delusion or a pinch of personal honor in their everyday lives. I myself am  continually faced with the standing of my own personal honor, especially when  plunged into debates. When faced with such a situation, my own personal honor  becomes a grand old deal, as it disables me form accepting error or fault. Due  to the sense of humanity and realism in Arthur Miller's catastrophic blunder  of a play, the un-enthused un-amused reader is able to experience a pang of  refreshment. This brief moment of diversion is endured whence they realize that  on some proverbial, undefined level, they are able to connect with the  characters and their emotions and therefore understand the concepts and ideas of  the play. There were many characters in the play that effectively enabled me to  comprehend the subjects of Arthur Miller's play. For instance the character of    Marco helped me grasp a stronger understanding about personal honor and standing  by your beliefs, as his character exemplified this trait. I also enjoyed the  character of Alfieri, as I found that from his distant pint of view, he  empowered me to understand all the various ideas portrayed in the play from an  unbiased point of view. Though the character of Alfieri aided me the most, I  found the most effective character in the play to be the devil's spawn  himself, Eddie Carbone, as the play is portrayed mainly through his eyes.    Eddie's shallow, miserable nature is a powerful, hard-hitting aspect noted  extensively in the play. As per previously mentioned, I despised Arthur    Miller's A View From The Bridge. The two-act, eighty-six-paged horrendous  nightmare will forever be embedded in my mind as a complete was of time and  effort. I despise this pathetic excuse for English literature and wish for it to  blaze in Hades.    
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