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Castigation of glibly accepted American Values in Arthur Miller's “All My Sons”

عنوان مقاله: Castigation of glibly accepted American Values in Arthur Miller's “All My Sons”
شناسه ملی مقاله: MTCONF07_257
منتشر شده در هفتمین همایش ملی پژوهش های نوین در حوزه زبان و ادبیات ایران در سال 1400
مشخصات نویسندگان مقاله:

Alaeddin Nahvi - Faculty Member University of Arts Tehran, Islamic Republic of Iran

خلاصه مقاله:
The play takes its title from the last words of Joe Keller before he takes his own life. Referring to his son Larry's statement that he was ending his life to make amends for the death of the twenty-one pilots, Joe says that to Larry "they were all sons: and I guess they were."What happens to Keller, and what the dramatist wants to happen to all of us, is a transformation of values. Joe is an ordinary and fairly decent individual. husband, devoted father and generous neighbor. But he suffers, like most of the people around him, from a confusion of values. His personal tragedy springs directly from his fidelity to values that are inherent in the American way of life but are antagonistic to the welfare of mankind.

کلمات کلیدی:
self-complacency, dexterity, guilt, escapism, confusion of values

صفحه اختصاصی مقاله و دریافت فایل کامل: https://civilica.com/doc/1371572/