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Six Degrees of Separation | Topics for Further Study
Many critics have remarked on the satiric elements in Six Degrees of Separation. Remember that satire is the use of ridicule, humor, or wit to criticize human nature and institutions and provoke change. Do you think the play is satirical? Why or why not?
Paul talks about the death of the imagination in his Catcher in the Rye speech. How does his monologue show his imaginative powers?
Conduct research to find out more about race and class relations in America in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Do the Kittredges strike you as realistic representations of...
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- Six Degrees of Separation: Introduction
- Six Degrees of Separation: Summary
- Six Degrees of Separation: John Guare Biography
- Six Degrees of Separation: Characters
- Six Degrees of Separation: Themes
- Six Degrees of Separation: Style
- Six Degrees of Separation: Historical Context
- Six Degrees of Separation: Critical Overview
- Six Degrees of Separation: Essays and Criticism
- Six Degrees of Separation: Topics for Further Study
- Six Degrees of Separation: Media Adaptations
- Six Degrees of Separation: What Do I Read Next?
- Six Degrees of Separation: Bibliography and Further Reading
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