Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Understanding Death of a Salesman
View through CrossRef
This collection of social, cultural, and historical documents and popular materials, with linking explanations and commentary, will help the reader to study the play in the context of its time and cultural background. The collected materials are designed to work with the play to highlight inherent conflicts within American society which lie at the heart ofDeath of a Salesman, and to explore how the play affects and is affected by social mores and beliefs. Salesmanship and the changing face of business, along with perceptions of sports, gender, and families, are explored through selections drawn from a rich variety of sources that help provide forceful evidence of the play's influence. Documents include essays, articles, and fiction, which have created or explored the social expectations of a typical American family in the late 1940s; unusual selections such as a self-analysis chart, an obituary, and a diary, which help to trace the history of salesmanship from the nineteenth century to the present day; and advertisements, song lyrics, speeches, how-to books, and other readings that promote an interdisciplinary study of the play.
More than 70 short primary documents illustrate the cultural, social and historical milieu of the time in which the play takes place. Topics explored under Cultural Myths and Values include the Protestant work ethic vs. myths of success, the myth of the golden West vs. urban myth, and the culture of youth vs. the culture of age. A chapter on economic forces provides materials on business vs. morality, humanity vs. technology, the haves and the have-nots, American business culture, the Depression, and how to be an effective salesman. A chapter on family and gender expectations includes documents on the roles of fathers and mothers, providers vs. cowboys or playboys, and homemakers vs. call girls. A chapter on sports and leisure features documents on amateur football and sports and American values. A final chapter examines the impact ofDeath of a Salesmanon American culture. Each chapter is followed by study questions, topics for writing and discussion, and a list of suggested reading. This work is an ideal companion for interdisciplinary study of the play.
Title: Understanding Death of a Salesman
Description:
This collection of social, cultural, and historical documents and popular materials, with linking explanations and commentary, will help the reader to study the play in the context of its time and cultural background.
The collected materials are designed to work with the play to highlight inherent conflicts within American society which lie at the heart ofDeath of a Salesman, and to explore how the play affects and is affected by social mores and beliefs.
Salesmanship and the changing face of business, along with perceptions of sports, gender, and families, are explored through selections drawn from a rich variety of sources that help provide forceful evidence of the play's influence.
Documents include essays, articles, and fiction, which have created or explored the social expectations of a typical American family in the late 1940s; unusual selections such as a self-analysis chart, an obituary, and a diary, which help to trace the history of salesmanship from the nineteenth century to the present day; and advertisements, song lyrics, speeches, how-to books, and other readings that promote an interdisciplinary study of the play.
More than 70 short primary documents illustrate the cultural, social and historical milieu of the time in which the play takes place.
Topics explored under Cultural Myths and Values include the Protestant work ethic vs.
myths of success, the myth of the golden West vs.
urban myth, and the culture of youth vs.
the culture of age.
A chapter on economic forces provides materials on business vs.
morality, humanity vs.
technology, the haves and the have-nots, American business culture, the Depression, and how to be an effective salesman.
A chapter on family and gender expectations includes documents on the roles of fathers and mothers, providers vs.
cowboys or playboys, and homemakers vs.
call girls.
A chapter on sports and leisure features documents on amateur football and sports and American values.
A final chapter examines the impact ofDeath of a Salesmanon American culture.
Each chapter is followed by study questions, topics for writing and discussion, and a list of suggested reading.
This work is an ideal companion for interdisciplinary study of the play.
Related Results
The Meaning of Death
The Meaning of Death
If death is the cessation of life, then, as a concept, it draws its meaning from the preceding life. While death and dying are inextricably connected, dying is still a part of life...
Women and the Death Penalty in the United States, 1900-1998
Women and the Death Penalty in the United States, 1900-1998
Using a historical framework, this book offers not only the penal history of the death penalty in the states that have given women the death penalty, but it also retells the storie...
Death and Afterlife
Death and Afterlife
Major religious traditions of the world contain perspectives of perennial importance on the topic of death and afterlife. Such concepts and beliefs are not only reflected directly ...
Online Afterlives
Online Afterlives
How digital technology—from Facebook tributes to QR codes on headstones—is changing our relationship to death.
Facebook is the biggest cemetery in the world, with co...
A Cultural History Of Death In The Renaissance
A Cultural History Of Death In The Renaissance
The movement from the Renaissance to the early modern period may have been one of the most tumultuous times in the history of the western world. Everything, sacred and profane, was...
Against the Death Penalty
Against the Death Penalty
A landmark dissenting opinion arguing against the death penalty.
Does the death penalty violate the Constitution? InAgainst the Death Penalty, Justice Stephen Bre...
Brain Death
Brain Death
The core of the text of this book combines the theory and practice of determining brain death. The history and development of clinical criteria of brain death is revisited. The com...
Planning and Managing Death Issues in the Schools
Planning and Managing Death Issues in the Schools
By managing death issues in a planned purposeful manner, schools can reduce suicide and other harmful behavioral reactions substantially. Helping students to understand death and l...

