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Point Of No Return In Arthur Miller's Death Of A Salesman

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Point Of No Return In Arthur Miller's Death Of A Salesman
I believe there can be a turning pint in a person's life after which nothing will ever be the same. Such is the case in Arthur Miller's play, Death of a Salesman, when Willy Loman's son Biff reaches a "point of no return" after discovering that Willy is having an affair with a woman in Boston. The shock and disillusionment from this revelaation made Biff see his father in a new light ande he would never be able to return to a life in which he trusted or respected his father. The quote "often in literature, situations reach a "point of no return," a point after which after which the life of a character in the work can never be same" means that there is a point or situation which someone, or some group of people must continue their current

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