How Did Arthur Miller Contribute To Capitalism

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The Great Depression could undoubtedly be one of the darkest times for 20th-century America, and many opinions on capitalism shifted. Among the perceptions of failed capitalism after the great depression is Arthur Miller’s, one of America's most popular playwrights. Miller grew up as a son of a factory owner that employed 800 to 1,000 people, but about a year after the stock market crashed in 1929, according to Miller, there was nothing left of it. As he grew up, he started to have opinions about capitalism that ran under investigation by the United State’s anti-Communist department, the “House Un-American Activities Committee” or H.U.A.C. for short, in 1956. Additionally, a speech delivered by Miller in 1958 Miller states that while he was growing up, he began to wonder if success was immoral, or if it was morally right for someone’s life to get destroyed by decisions that were not that of their own, which points out that the great depression brought him to a realization. Ultimately, the American dramatist Arthur Miller contributed to 20th-century realism in his play Death of a Salesman with his underlying …show more content…

During this, Isidor owned a successful business that manufactured women’s coats while Agusta, a schoolteacher, taught her children proper customs and heritage in line with Judaism. Once Miller turned 14 years old the stock market crashed, he says in an interview with Christopher Bigsby in Readings on Arthur Miller, that he remembers riding his bike past a bank to school, in front of the bank there was a crowd of people standing, asking what happened to their money with policemen explaining what happened to their money. Eventually, after the crash happened Isidore’s business dissolved, and the Miller family moved to a smaller home in Brooklyn while Arthur attended James Madison High

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