Eddie Carbone Essays

  • Who Killed Eddie Carbone and Why

    530 Words  | 2 Pages

    Killed Eddie Carbone and Why Introduction: In a poor Italian community of Brooklyn, the Carbone family consists of three members. Eddie Carbone, the man of the house. Beatrice Carbone, wife of Eddie Carbone and Catherine, their niece. But, they didn’t consider that their little world would be turning upside down with the arrival of Beatrice cousin’s Marco and Rodolpho. Reading and watching the story, I will base my ‘evidence’ on who killed Eddie Carbone and why. Eddie Carbone: Eddie

  • How does Eddie Carbone bring fate upon himself?

    1693 Words  | 4 Pages

    Subject : How does Eddie Carbone brings fate upon himself? Many immigrants saw America as a land of opportunities, golden land. The view from the bridge ======================== Subject : How does Eddie Carbone brings fate upon himself? Many immigrants saw America as a land of opportunities, “golden land”. For these migrants America provided everything, which their native countries couldn’t offer them. It was a break from poverty and constant starvation. They all came to find their

  • Eddie Carbone

    980 Words  | 2 Pages

    from the Bridge’. The play is set in an Italian-American neighborhood called Red Hook, a slum area, in New York at the Brooklyn Bridge Eddie, the play's protagonist, is a man who drives his own life to doom due to his inappropriate feelings for his niece, which is the primary reason for his downfall. Miller conveys the development of the character of Eddie Carbone through language and the key themes along with stage directions. Tension is initiated in the play by the language used like exclamatory

  • Examine the role of Alfieri in A view from the bridge. Comment on

    1198 Words  | 3 Pages

    bridge. I will comment on how he uses his role as both commentator and character to create dramatic tension in the play. A view from the bridge is a play set in the late 1940s and is based in the rural streets of Brooklyn harbour, New York. Eddie Carbone is an Italian longshoreman working on the New York docks and lives with his wife Beatrice and her niece Catherine. Eddie's wife accepts to refuge her cousins from Sicily as illegal immigrants until they could get their paperwork sorted. Catherine

  • A View From the Bridge

    3444 Words  | 7 Pages

    Eddie Carbone is an American-Sicilian man working in Brooklyn. He works as a longshoreman: carrying crates and goods from the ships. He is quite a large man. His job requires him to be strong and a good worker. In other words he is very masculine. He is an ordinary man. He lives with his wife and niece, whom he treats like a daughter, and like all good men should do, he works every day to provide them with enough money to survive on. Eddie is a man’s man. He lives within a close-knit community of

  • The Role of Alfieri in Miller’s A View from the Bridge

    7321 Words  | 15 Pages

    admired by people for his strength and loyalty. In 1957, Miller was charged with contempt by the U.S. Court of Appeals. Miller's own struggle therefore with this issue is present in ‘A View from the Bridge’ as he, like the characters in his plays (Eddie Carbone), was faced with the problem of choosing to be American or not, specifically by naming names of people who were doing (what were considered then) unlawful acts. Miller chose to write about a community that accepted and protected unlawful people

  • Eddie Carbone Character Analysis

    1040 Words  | 3 Pages

    Eddie Carbone is the tragic and self-interested main character from A View from the Bridge, a play by Arthur Miller. He is full of pride, and this pride means a lot. It also means that he will probably not back down in any circumstance. As the play opens, Eddie is a caring and loving character. Though he remains concerned to the very end, his behavior and true character suffer a hefty fall. He is the main character, yet the character I liked the least. The little likeability that I saw in him is

  • Eddie Carbone as a Tragic Hero

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    Eddie Carbone as a Tragic Hero Before I decide on whether Eddie Carbone is a tragic hero, we must define what the word 'tragic' and 'hero' actually mean. 'Tragic'- A tragedy is a type of drama. A tragedy traces the fall of the central figure, the 'hero', as he grapples with his destiny. Historically, tragedy started in Ancient Greece. Greek tragedies usually formed on a very important and powerful figure (a king or a prince perhaps) who makes an error or judgement or who has a hamartia

  • Eddie Carbone in A View From the Bridge

    959 Words  | 2 Pages

    Eddie Carbone in A View From the Bridge During the final scene preceding the end of act 1, Arthur Miller collects the major characters and in particular, he builds up and develops Eddie Carbone's character. I shall now analyse this scene, paying close attention to Miller's use of dramatic techniques. Eddie starts off reading a newspaper, hence demonstrating Eddie's awareness

  • Eddie Carbone as the Tragic Hero of the Play

    1949 Words  | 4 Pages

    Eddie Carbone as the Tragic Hero of the Play “One who is neither villainous nor exceptionally virtuous, moving from happiness to misery through some frailty or error in judgement.” The above opening quotation is from Aristotle, which is his view of what elements a tragic hero contains. This essay will investigate the destiny of the main character Eddie Carbone also known as a tragic hero, as illustrated by Arthur Miller in ‘A view from a Bridge’ against Aristotle’s view of a tragic hero

  • Eddie Carbone: A Greek Tragic Hero

    1130 Words  | 3 Pages

    ‘How does the composer of A View From The Bridge portray Eddie Carbone’s downfall as similar to that of a Greek tragic hero?’ Miller’s character, Eddie Carbone, closely resembles the characteristics of a Greek tragic hero. The actions takes place in 1950s America, in an Italian American neighborhood near the Brooklyn Bridge in New York. Although Eddie is not a typical hero of noble status, he shares several heroic qualities that elevate his status in his community. Eddie’s hardworking and caring

  • Analysing the Portrayal of Eddie Carbone as a Tragic Hero

    2150 Words  | 5 Pages

    Analysing the Portrayal of Eddie Carbone as a Tragic Hero A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller is a dramatically tense tragedy that presents the story of the downfall of an ordinary man. The play examines the tragic consequences of Eddie Carbone's inability to understand himself and his actions. This predominantly takes the form of his prejudice towards his cousin and his inappropriate attraction to his niece. It is set in the 1950s and was written while Miller had become interested in

  • Essay Of A View From The Bridge By Eddie Carbone

    1358 Words  | 3 Pages

    thrown into the mixture if the circumstances call for it. In the novel A View from the Bridge, by Arthur Miller, a man named Eddie Carbone possesses an obsessive trait due to his almost infatuation with his niece Catherine. Throughout the play, the struggle to control his niece despite her “love” for Beatrice’s cousin, Rodolpho, brings out

  • Eddie Carbone in A View From the Bridge by Arthur Miller

    1051 Words  | 3 Pages

    Eddie Carbone in A View From the Bridge by Arthur Miller The play “A view from the bridge” is set in Red hook area of New York, the play was written by a man called Arthur Miller he wrote this particular play in 1950 at the age of 35. His parents were immigrants in the United States of America, they had lived a wealthy life this all went wrong along with the American economy. Arthur Miller worked as a warehouse man, and in order to save his fees he went to Michigan University in 1934,

  • Eddie Carbone in Arthur Miller's A View From The Bridge

    2463 Words  | 5 Pages

    In this essay I will discuss how the view’s of Eddie Carbone, the lead role in “A View From The Bridge”, changes among the audience. I plan to go through the script and note any important scenes which I will then analyse in the audience’s perspective. A View From The Bridge is a play written by Arthur Miller in 1955, which was originally arranged in rhymes but later was changed. Miller has written the play in conversational Brooklynese, for example, “nuttin’” and the spelling of many words

  • Eddie Carbone as a Tragic Hero in A View from the Bridge

    1122 Words  | 3 Pages

    dockworker, Eddie Carbone, in 1950s America who is the main focus of the play. He represents the average, everyday man in society, but his character draws parallels to many tragic heroes in the past shown in Greek tragedies, Shakespeare’s plays, etc. (e.g. Hamlet and Macbeth). A tragic hero is the hero in the story who has positive and negative traits and their negative traits is what eventually leads to the demise and this is what happens to Eddie. Many fathers and uncles can relate to Eddie when they

  • Eddie Carbone in Arthur Miller's A View From The Bridge

    906 Words  | 2 Pages

    Eddie Carbone in Arthur Miller's The View From The Bridge Eddie is a simple person who is a victim of circumstances but he also contributes to his downfall. I am going to start with his Sicilian background because I believe that this is one of the most important things that motivates Eddie. Coming from a Sicilian background Eddie believed that the man should be the leader of the household and that everything goes by him first concerning his family and that he should be very manly and

  • The Breakdown of the Carbone family in A View From The Bridge

    1218 Words  | 3 Pages

    Trace the Breakdown of the Carbone family in A View From The Bridge New York in the 1940’s the United States welcomed immigrants from all over Europe but especially Italy, the only problem with these immigrants was, most where illegal. The Italians, starved from the depression of World War One fled their homes and sometimes families for a better life in America. This often worked because the areas where you went to live often contained more people of the same race and as they say ‘blood

  • A View From Teh Bridge

    593 Words  | 2 Pages

    A View from the Bridge - Carbone family and community in scene 1 [-red-] Eddie is very protective of Catherine. Eddie seems very concerned as to the welfare of Catherine. "Where you goin' all dressed up?" "where you goin'?" "whats going on?" "I think its too short ain't it?" Eddie doesn't want Catherine to grow up "you're walking wavy!" He is concerned that she might get sexually assaulted or may be taken advantage of by men. Catherine disapproves of his protectiveness and nearly starts to cry

  • Hanging Woman Creek

    1060 Words  | 3 Pages

    another man by a fire, Eddie and Van. He quickly became friends with Eddie, and realized that Van was more trouble than he was worth. He and Eddie hitched a train to the West, looking for jobs as cowherds. They reach a town on the edge of the frontier that Pike has visited in the past. He finds some friends and one that offers a job. However, this job is not a very safe one. It is to round up some cattle near an outpost on Hanging Woman Creek and stay there. Pike and Eddie find much trouble, and