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Inherit the Wind | Critical Overview
During the 1950s, America was in the process of settling in after the tumultuous years of World War II. But, beneath an air of prosperity and comfort, social tension existed. Lawrence and Lee sought to make some kind of sense of the climate of anxiety and fear fed by McCarthyism and anti-Communist sentiment. They found a parallel in the Scopes Monkey Trial of 1925. The story of Inherit the Wind is a dramatization, not a history lesson, as the playwrights make clear in their foreword to the play. It is a story about conflict in American culture.
Despite the play's...
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- Inherit the Wind: Introduction
- Inherit the Wind: Summary
- Inherit the Wind: Jerome Lawrence, Robert E. Lee Biography
- Inherit the Wind: Characters
- Inherit the Wind: Themes
- Inherit the Wind: Style
- Inherit the Wind: Historical Context
- Inherit the Wind: Critical Overview
- Inherit the Wind: Essays and Criticism
- Inherit the Wind: Compare and Contrast
- Inherit the Wind: Topics for Further Study
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