Willy Loman

2309 Words5 Pages

Plot Summary Willy Loman, an aging salesman, returns home from the business trip. He is extremely exhausted as if he had come to the end of life. Only his wife, Linda, understands and considers him that she makes every effort to maintain Willy’s dignity, hoping to give him some confidence in life. She wants him to ask his boss, Howard Wagner, to work in New York so that he does not to travel long distance. However, all this seems to be useless. His son Biff returns from farmland. But Willy complains to him because he believes Biff will be a sports star successfully in the future and working on the farmland is waste of time. But Biff does not want to stay in a big city full of competition and fraud. In the heavy pressure, Willy becomes trance. In the night, Willy talks to the imagined people …show more content…

He is chasing to succeed in these two aspects and tries to make a living as a salesman. But Willy and his family are extreme optimistic and ideal that they believe they can achieve American dream without changing thoughts about job and working. So it is also a contradiction between reality and illusion. Willy always thinks he is a great salesman and tries to convince him that his sons Biff will succeed if he follow his father’s steps while he does nothing when he is thirty-four. Miller said, “Willy is foolish and even ridiculous sometimes. He tells the most transparent lies, exaggerates mercilessly, and so on. But I really want you to see that his impulses are not foolish at all. He cannot bear reality, and since he can’t do much to change it, he keeps changing his ideas of it” (1984) There is a contradiction in Miller’s words. What does Miller want to tell audiences and readers? Is the death of Willy a tragedy or not? Does it means he encourage this

Open Document