An analysis of the significance and the dramatic impact of the “restaurant scene” (P79-87) in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman
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An analysis of the significance and the dramatic impact of the "restaurant scene" (P79-87) in Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman In 1915, Arthur T. Miller was born in the city of New York, where his family business was ruined after the stock market crash of '29. This had a continuous affect on his life and work. The half-Austrian, half-American playwright wrote Death of a Salesman in 1949, at the age of 34. Along with his other acclaimed plays (including All My Sons and The Crucible): Death of a Salesman includes his common themes of corruption, society's deterioration, the "Great American Dream" and lost values. Set in the Mid-20th century after the Second World War: Death of a Salesman is a tale of values lost to a world where they now carry little weight and of a man, in himself, lost to those values and in so doing isolating himself to...

