In “Death of a Salesman” The struggle to find individual worth is within each character. Willy Loman is a traveling salesman who has tried his entire life to reach the American Dream. The overwhelming tension in his family is caused by the failure for Willy to reach his goal. He is so focused on becoming a successful salesman he never really grasps a true understanding of himself. His suicide later in the story reveals that his individual worth he carried his whole life was never realized. He never felt the large amounts of gratitude and love his family produced and from this aspect of it really left you feeling bad for him.…
The central theme in "Death of a Salesman" is the quest to obtain the American Dream. Ben had a tremendous impact on this theme in the play. Ben went into the jungle when he was 17 and came out of it rich. Following the theme of the play, Ben was the epitome of success. The effect that Ben had on the development of other characters is shown through Willy Loman's character. Ben lived the life he wanted and had the job he wanted. Even though Ben's involvement in the play was brief, his success showed what Willy so desperately craved for himself and his sons. Willy wanted to be successful like his brother. Through all the trips Ben made, he was quite a successful man. Through all the trips Willy made, all he had going on for himself was an affair. Ben was rich and happy, while Willy on the other had been poor and miserable.…
During the span of the book, Willy attempts to take his life. Whatever motive was behind his actions, one presumes it is almost definitely related to Willy’s. But why? The audience must wonder what horrible thing pushes a man over the edge like that? For willy, his idea of success is unlike many others. He himself believed that he was an above average salesman. Yet, he never exactly “made it big”, much like an amateur actor in Hollywood. Willy never got his hollywood premier no matter how far he traveled or how hard he seemed to work for it.…
Willy often retreats to the past, because he does not want to deal with his failures in the present. Once Willy finally owns up to his mistakes he fixes the problem by committing suicide, because his family can get insurance money from his death.…
“The Bamboo Flute” is a book set in late 1920 and early 1930 Australia when times were hard and the economy was very bad. People had lost their jobs and had no money to buy necessities. It is about a young boy, Paul, who has to help a lot on the farm he lives on with his mother and father. He goes to school 5 miles away and takes him an hour to walk to school each day. Each day he falls asleep in class because he is so tired from having to wake up early to help on the farm so his family can have food and crops to sell for money. Lots of men come past their farm and come to the door to look for work and a sandwich cup of tea out of it. At school all the children are told not to talk to these men as they are most likely unreliable and have been stealing crops. However, Paul is out investigating the death of a lamb when he finds a campfire and an old man, Eric the Red, who is playing a silver flute. He talks to Paul and shows him how to make a flute out of a stick of bamboo. Paul takes the flute to school and it is confiscated but it is returned to him when the teacher realises what it is. When Paul plays the flute at home his father is unhappy at first sight of the flute but his face brightens as he hears the music.…
During the play the main focus point is Willy’s volcanic relationship with his eldest son Biff, in which he is on the same path as his father. “WILLY: Sure. Certain men just don’t get started till later in life. Like Thomas Edison, I think. Or B.F. Goodrich. One of them was deaf. [He starts for the bedroom doorway.] I’ll put my money on Biff. (Act 1)” Willy sticks to his gut and hopes that Biff will be the greatest major business entrepreneur. He’s desperate for Biff to follow in his foot steps even though his advice is not the reality of the new world they live…
In the play, Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, Willy Loman suffers a death of an average man. This story comprises of a whole family of unsuccessful men who use backdoors to accomplish a triumph. As the main focus of the play,Willy’s personality traits are gained through involvement with other characters.…
You can see that the great outdoors is where Willy wants to be, it’s a place that is desired, but they don’t think they can make a living there to meet Willy’s requirements;…
At the beginning of Act I Willy begins to grumble about b.s. Wpro taking a toll on his aching body. He then takes out his anger on his son Biff, who is not working to his full potential in Willie's eyes. Willy starts to display actions of being invaded as he says in the text "There's more people! Thats what's ruining the country! Population is getting out of control. The competition is maddening!" (Miller 860) Willy blames his ineptitude at his workplace on Society when, in fact, it is his social skulls that wrecks his success. In the later scene Willys sons, Biff and Happy,discuss Willys state of being. Biff suggests that Willy license was going to be revoked because his eyes are just not what they used to be. Happy then says "No, I've driven with him.He sees alright.He just doesn't keep his mind on it." (Miller 861) The author implies that Willys mind is losing grip of reality through the context.…
Willy’s inability to recognize the actual reality of his situation is first seen during the scene where Ben is introduced. In this scene, Ben tells of their father’s success as a salesman and his own rapid success with diamonds in Africa. As a result of this “interaction”, Willy believes that either he or his sons will have a similar kind of success. The confused man does not take into account that Ben happened to be extremely lucky…
Ben is Willy’s dead older brother who had lived the American Dream by going into a forest and becoming a rich man with diamonds. After he found the diamonds Ben had lots of opportunity for business. Willy was very jealous of Ben because Willy’s dream was unattainable to him. It was unattainable to him because no matter how hard he tried he could never reach the American Dream. He worked hard his whole life, where as Ben became very lucky. Willy sees the ghost of Ben and talks to him about life and what choices to make. The brothers talk about their parents and how their father was a businessman. Ben talks to the boys about achieving the American Dream, “Never fight fair with a stranger, boy. You’ll never get out of the jungle that way.” Ben knows a great deal about living rich and successful.…
As with Hamlet, Death of a Salesman has a major theme of family. Willy believes in what he considers the promise of the “American Dream”, owning a house, having a wife, two children and a white picket fence and the idea that a “well-liked” and “attractive” man will lead to a life of fortune and riches. Oddly enough he becomes obsessed with that idea after his brother tells him that he can become rich if he had gone to the jungle with him, but Willy believes that you have to have a job in the city and be a travailing salesman to have what he considers the American Dream. That assumption is based on the…
Willy hallucinates the most about Ben, his older brother who found success in Alaska. Every time Willy pictures Ben, Willy says "If I'd gone with him to Alaska that time, everything would've been totally different" (45). Ben represents a missed opportunity for Willy since Ben found wealth in Alaska, but Willy missed his chance to go. Alaska embodies the many opportunities that Willy passed up, which he now regrets since his dreams of success are not and will not become reality. Because Willy has realized that all of his chances for wealth have passed him by, he tries to live his dreams vicariously through his sons. In another hallucination, Willy turns to his brother for help, asking "Ben, how should I teach [my sons]?" (52). Willy seeks Ben's advice for how to raise his sons because he wants his children to become rich, like Ben. Wealth is Willy's primary concern, which is reflected in the way he raises his sons and in his thirst to help his sons achieve wealth. After Ben tells Willy that he was rich when he walked out of the jungle at seventeen, Willy exclaims, " [he] was rich! That's just the spirit I want to imbue [my sons] with! To walk into a jungle!" (52). Willy's outburst symbolizes his desire to instill longing for riches into his own sons. Also, Willy wants his sons to become rich no matter what. It shows that Willy is willing to throw his…
Willy Loman had many blessings in his life: he had a supportive wife, two healthy children, and talent as a carpenter, yet despite possessing what many would consider to be happiness, Willy was filled with anger, resentment, and sadness at his existence, for the road he traversed was a bitter one. Willy Loman was abandoned during his childhood, stating to Ben during a flashback when asked how much he remembered about his father, “Well, I was just a baby, of course, only three or four years old” and “all I remember is a man with a big beard, and I was in Mamma’s lap, sitting around a fire, and some kind of high music.” Because of his abandonment, Willy was void of any affection or acknowledgement growing up, so he yearned to fulfill…
Arguably the theme most prevalent in Death of a Salesman is that of a quest for identity (coming of age). Even though the Willy Loman character is a middle-aged man, the play reveals him to be in search of his true identity in order…