Packet 2: Bonus 18

Answer the following about refrigerators as symbols of working-class struggle in American theatre, for 10 points each.
[10e] This character exclaims that “once in my life I would like to own something outright before it’s broken” while bemoaning his perpetually broken Hastings refrigerator to his wife Linda in Death of a Salesman.
ANSWER: Willy Loman [or William Loman; prompt on Loman]
[10h] In this play, a girl talks to her family’s empty refrigerator, which her brother fills with artichokes. This play’s central family includes a girl working on a 4-H project about chicken butchery and a drunk who breaks their door.
ANSWER: Curse of the Starving Class (by Sam Shepard)
[10m] Bono finally agrees to buy a fridge for his wife on a bet with this play’s protagonist. A woman in this play asks her husband “don’t you think I had dreams and hopes?” after he reveals that his mistress Alberta is pregnant.
ANSWER: Fences (by August Wilson)
<TM, American Literature> | NAFTA-Packet-2

HeardPPBE %M %H %
4217.1493%67%12%

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Conversion


Summary

TournamentEditionMatchHeardPPBE %M %H %
2026 NAFTA at Stanford01/17/2026415.00100%50%0%
2026 NAFTA at UBC01/17/2026210.00100%0%0%
2025 NAFTA Online02/14/2026415.0075%75%0%
2026 NAFTA at Vanderbilt02/14/2026316.67100%67%0%
2025 NAFTA at Toronto09/13/2025316.67100%67%0%
2025 NAFTA at Toronto09/13/2025260.000%400%200%
2025 NAFTA at Maryland09/27/2025516.00100%60%0%
2025 NAFTA at Harvard10/04/2025316.67100%67%0%
2025 NAFTA at Oxford10/11/2025316.67100%67%0%
2025 NAFTA at Chicago11/08/2025611.67100%17%0%
2025 NAFTA at Columbia11/08/2025516.00100%40%20%
2025 NAFTA at Richmond12/20/2025215.00100%50%0%