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A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo"
A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo"
A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo"
Ebook36 pages20 minutes

A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo"

By Gale and Cengage

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A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo," excerpted from Gale's acclaimed Drama For Students. This concise study guide includes plot summary; character analysis; author biography; study questions; historical context; suggestions for further reading; and much more. For any literature project, trust Drama For Students for all of your research needs.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 27, 2016
ISBN9781535818032
A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo"

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    A Study Guide for David Mamet's "American Buffalo" - Gale

    2

    American Buffalo

    David Mamet

    1975

    Introduction

    Thorstein Veblen wrote that business wisdom, when reduced to its basest form, frequently resorts to the judicious use of sabotage—an idea that David Mamet explores in his American Buffalo. First performed in Chicago in 1975, the play made its way to Broadway in 1977. Although Mamet had already achieved some success with his Sexual Perversity in Chicago (1972) the response to American Buffalo was highly favorable, despite the occasional harsh review. Many critics applauded Mamet’s ability to capture the cadences and ambiguities in everyday American speech: Newsweek’s Jack Kroll, for example, remarked that Mamet is someone to listen to. He’s that rare bird, an American playwright who’s a language playwright. Edwin Wilson, writing in the Wall Street Journal, stated that Mamet has a keen ear for the idiosyncrasies and the humor of everyday speech. While some critics dismissed American Buffalo (like the New York Daily News’s Douglas Watt) as a poor excuse for a play and (like the Christian Science Monitor’s John Beaufort) too superficial to waste time upon, most were enthusiastic about Mamet’s look at the ways in which three petty crooks plan to steal a coin collection in the name of good business.

    Mamet’s plays (and this one is no exception) are radically different from ones written in previous theatrical eras and periods. Characters rarely speak in full sentences and their language (depending on the topic at hand) is often a mix of half-thoughts and obscenities, making the plays—at times—difficult to read. When performed, however, these seemingly inarticulate utterances yield a rhythm found in few other playwrights’ work. Part of the fascination of the play, wrote Women’s Wear Daily’s Howard Kissel, lies in noting how the same banal language takes on different colors as we perceive the changing relationships between the

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