Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman

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Denial by definition is in which a person is faced with a fact that is too uncomfortable to accept and rejects it instead, insisting that it is not true despite what may be overwhelming evidence. In Arthur Miller’s play The Death of a Salesman the Loman family lives and breathes in denial. This starts with Willy’s and Linda’s awkward and awful marriage and ends with their two troubled sons. The Loman Family’s dysfunctional traits come from years of self-deception, which they use as a means to mentally escape the cruel reality of their everyday lives. Their eldest son Biff is the only member of the family to see these false hopes and makes the decision to change his life.

These lies and false illusions are mostly created by the head of the Loman household, Willy Loman. Willy is a middle aged man who is a women’s clothing salesman in the northeast. He travels to all these places such as Boston and Providence. At the beginning of the book we first see a glimpse of this when his wife Linda asks about the car. “How’d the Chevy run?” his wife asks. Willy replies by saying “Chevrolet, Linda is the greatest car ever built.” Linda then responds to Willy by saying “You owe Frank money for the carburetor” Willy then yells “I’m not going to pay that man! That goddam Chevrolet, they ought to prohibit the manufacturing of that car! “. (Act I) It goes from being the greatest car ever built to a worthless pile of junk in a matter of seconds. This quote shows that Willy during his “fantasy” is easygoing and laid back then when he snaps out of his web of lies and realizes his true financial situation he immediately changes the opinion of his car. Willy’s self-deception doesn’t just target his material wealth it also targets his personal life.
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...p just like his father.

All in all Willy, Linda, Biff, and Happy all use self-deception to mentally escape the reality of the average lives. They are an American family who obsesses over material wealth such as having a nice car and a nice house and a good paying job, and belittle the small things in life like doing what makes you happy even if it doesn’t pay much. They chase the American dream and barely get buy doing it and are average at everything they do. Biff the oldest son is the only one in the family that becomes aware of this by the end of the play. .

Works Cited

Death of A Salesman. Dir. Dir Volker Schlondorff. Perf. Dustin Hoffman. 1985. film.

Miller, Arthur. Death of A Salesman. New York: Penguin Book, 1949. Print.

Shmoop Editorial Team. "Death of a Salesman Theme Quotes." Shmoop.com. Shmoop University, Inc., 11 Nov. 2008. Web. 9 May 2014.

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