Analysis Of Arthur Miller's 'Death Of A Salesman'

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Sealed Fate
Since Arthur Miller’s play “Death of a Salesman” first appeared on the Broadway stage in 1949, Willy Loman has become one of the most iconic and over-analyzed characters in American literature. In the play, Willy is an aging New York salesman who is facing both personal and professional problems. In fact, Miller indicates in Act I that Willy is suicidal when he proclaims “I have such strange thoughts, I have such strange thoughts,” as he explains to his wife, Linda, that he –more than once- nearly ran his car off the road (964). On the surface, his suicidal tendencies are due to his failure to earn enough money to support his family in his old age. Yet, as the play progresses, the audience comes to understand that there are deep-seated issues in Willy’s past and in his psychological makeup that have contributed to his current station in life. Miller’s “Death of a Salesman" can …show more content…

Bernard was a dorky nobody who worshipped Biff when they were growing up. But now Bernard is a successful lawyer with a family, in contrast to Biff (1011). Willy cannot understand how Bernard ended up where he while his son “. . . laid down and died . . .” (1011) (1013). In Willy’s memory of the past, the audience can see how Willy encouraged Biff to cheat on tests with Bernard’s help (980). However, Willy evades the truth that lies in his ill-considered encouragement ensuing Biff’s doomed fate. Willy instead fixates on the time Biff played football in Ebbets Field, but the only thing he remembers was the crowd cheering “Loman, Loman, Loman” (997). This demonstrates that it was not his son Willy was rooting for as much as the reflected glory that came with the celebrity of the moment. Again, this shows how Willy actually praised the gratification of success rather than the actual hard work that makes a successful

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