“Introduction” to the Collected Plays BY Arthur Miller (1915-2005)

Introduction to the Collected Plays:-
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Q-1:- How Miller presents his conception of drama and its objectives in his “Introduction to Collected Plays”.
Or
What is Miller’s view of the reality in the context of modern dramatic practice? How it is related to history, common man, playwright and its representation.
Annswer:-
In the “Introduction to his collected plays” Mr. Miller presents his theories of art and drama. A Play, he says is a dynamic communication between audience or common man and the dramatist which pre-supposed a mutual frame of reference. ‘Something in the air’ collectively sensed. The role of the playwright therefore is to detect this “Something” and refine it artistically. A play should be understood at all revels and should express a universal human behavior or emotion. The conception and execution of “All my Sons,”, “Death of a sales man”, “The Crucibel”, “A Memory of Two Mondays” and “A view from the Bridge” is outlined in the introduction and illustrates how the theory Miller has used in these dramas.
After Miller’s assessment of his own work and the examination of the context in which he practice his craft as a playwright in the 20th century offer us his perception of the modern theatre. He wrote this long essay to introduce the new generation of readers to his five plays. The essay is also a discourse on the nature of drama and he involves his views on composing, objectives, style, performance, social relevance and theatrical understanding which will inform the contemporary dramatic audience. Miller takes a historical perspective on the subject of drama which is to be expected as he also presented a theory of time which under corrents in his own dramatic works. Here he provides us about his views on the traditions of theatrical practice in the west.
Miller’s draws attention to the fact that there is a distinction between what is drama and what is regarded as literature. He considers the “Introduction to the collected plays” to be an opportunity to place his views on drama and the theatre, especially his own practice and priorities as a playwrights. When he starts the discussion by asserting that the nature of drama determined by the condition of organicity, he invite us to take the note of the historical orbit through which the different developments in modern theatre may be addressed and understood. Miller located the art of drama to its purpose and how the experience of living cannot be separated from what is enacted on the stage. Whatever may be the theme or plot, who ever make playing the roles, the prime business of a play to create a sense of reality among its audience? This reality will strike the audience and make them emotional.
The focus on the objectives of drama is an important feature of this “Introduction”. As Miller’s analysis about the art of theatre within the context of human existence and experience. When the actor appears on the stage, there is anticipation that there will be an action and that performance will generate a sense of reality in the mind of the audience. The way an actor appears and performs on the stage is linked to what the playwright aims to project. The choice of dress, mannerism, vocabulary, and stage craft represented in the play come together to show what the playwright aims for and there is always an expectation that same linked will be there between what is put up on the stage and that which people consider the part of their lives. For a modern audience, therefore it is likely as miller suggest that Shakespeare will seem to be more realistic than Sophocles. In this way Miller projected that reality is the organic part of a drama which enables its audience to establish a link between the theatre and their lives. In this discussion Miller reveals how he maintain this base in most of his drama.(How Reality Is)
Q-2 How does Miller present the criticism of his own dramas through the essay “Introduction to the collected plays?”
Answer:- The Introduction to collected plays is a valuable criticism by Arthur Miller on his own dramas. Here Miller presents his conception of drama and how he projected that dramatic conception in his five most celebrated dramas. As a playwright Miller emphasizes the necessity of dramatic design. According to him, a play must end in a climax which much goes through the different threads of the plot to arrive at a justified conclusion. In this sense all plays present the view point of the playwright. In this essay Miller presents the dramatic structure, objectives and form of presentation of his most renown plays like, “All my sons”, “Death of a Sales man”, “The Crucible”, ‘A view from the Bridge” and “A memory of two Mondays.”
“All my sons” is a drama about guilt and responsibility. When Keller discovers that his much love father Joe Keller was responsible through his part in supplying defective equipment to the Army air force, for the deaths of 21 air pilots and also his brother Larry Keller, he developed a strong hatred toward his father. The play ends with the suicide of Joe Keller. “Death of a Salesman” is a tragedy in which past and present are mingled involving middle aged travelling Salesman who after end unsuccessful attempted to materialized his dramas, ultimately commit suicide. So that with his insurance money his family could have a better of life. The Drama “The Crucible” is about a character name Salem who had a daughter, whom the villagers convicted as a practitioner of witchcraft. As a result the woman has to suffer a lot. “A view from the Greece” is a drama concerning the tragic consequences of Eddie Carbon’s illegal love relation with his 18 year old Miss Catherine, whom he adopted after her mother’s death. “A memory of two Mondays” is a one act play that examines a group of factory workers trapped without hope of relief in their mechanical job. In two Mondays, separated a span of years, the playwright projected the sufferings and exploitation of the working class people.
Although “All my sons” was not the first play that Miller wrote but it was the one which showed him the importance of the organic unity of a drama. In this drama he was able to fuse the various element of the play into one decisive organic structure. In this regard Miller is in depth to Ibsen. That is why he says that he was trying the play to make appear real and less dramatic so that the audience would connect to the subject that he was dealing with.
‘Death of a Sales man’ is his most well known play. In this introduction Miller likes about the critical reception to which the play has been subjected over time. One of the important issues of the play that it rejected the conventional conception of tragedy and elevated a common man to the status of a tragic hero. In this drama Miller looked of the idea of tragedy in the context of 20th century as he remarks, “Things to change and even a genius is limited by his time and the nature of his society.” “Death of a Salesman” is not a play that may be confined within a specific frame that is why Miller considers this drama to be a “Slippery text”. This is because the play challenges the Aristrolian notions of tragedy and brings in the common man as a crucial factor in the scheme of things.
In the crucible which shows Miller departing from the thematic orientation of his earlier plays. This drama deals with the interior and subjective emotions that beset man at the time of social crisis with question of quilt occupy in the centre Miller writes that this was a tough play. The Crucible enabled Miller to look at the practice of his craft afresh and examine how the moral question in the modern age requires a different from of address. In his next two plays such as “A View from the Greece” and “A memory of two Mondays”, there was a shift in a presentation. Both the plays are concerned with modern man’s existence in this age and their economic and emotional problem. But, none of them could capture the audience imagination in the way that “Death of a Salesman” did.
The thread that runs through the “Introduction” to gives importance on the changing social scenario with which the issue of reality must be addressed. The two key points ‘realism’ and ‘performance’ remain consistently at the axis of the ‘Introduction’ and Miller’s examination about his plays provide us and over view of his entire dramatic composition. Miller is not a prolific writer. He writes only when he feels the need for it, but what he write is great. His “Introduction to collected plays” is a profound self criticism coupled with intellect. In most of the dramas Miller blends the techniques of realism and expressionism to convey his dramatic objectives and he is much appropriate when he calls his dramas, “Bright view point about mankind”.


All the best by P.B.