In ‘Death of a Salesman’ written by Arthur Miller‚ Bernard is shown as a tremendously memorable character. Throughout the play‚ his contradictions to Biff‚ poor judgments of him and his parent- like personality are well presented. By using the character‚ Miller tries to convey the moral messages and develops an attention grabbing plot First‚ Bernard’s contradictory character compared to Biff‚ makes him memorable. Bernard is literally everything that Biff is not. Biff is a high school football
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In Arthur miller’s‚ Death of a Salesman‚ Willy Loman‚ the protagonist of the play‚ is used as an example to show that once you lie‚ everything goes downhill. Willy is a salesman‚ that travels to far cities away from his house to make people interested in his supplies. In the opening scene‚ he tells Linda‚ his wife‚ that he is exhausted from driving far away from home. Willy‚ then continuously talks about how he is a vital asset to the company‚ yet they have him doing the same thing for the past thirty
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Dimitri Antonopoulos English 8 Dr.McDonald A Doll House Study Question Essay #2: Nora lies to Helmer in the opening scene about eating macaroons. Trace the theme of lying through the play. In Ibsen’s A Doll House‚ Nora and Torvald encounter common problems that many couples have experienced in past and present relationships. Of those problems is the act of deception‚ a major theme portrayed in the novel. Throughout the novel there is constant deception caused from pre-existing issues
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Death of a Salesman Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman” is perhaps one of the most renowned tragedies of all time. Miller reinvented the framework of the tragedy‚ and ignoring the rules of Aristotle’s classic tragedy‚ created a new ‘modern’ form of tragedy that he believed was better. Miller did so by connecting the audience to the main characters of the novel; Willy‚ Biff‚ Happy‚ and Linda‚ making them relatable and similar to the common man. Despite seeming average at first glance‚ the Loman
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pervades his dialogue. Throughout his career‚ Miller often was subject to reviews in which critics mostly excoriated him for what they judged as a failed use of language in his plays. For example‚ in the Nation review of the original production of Death of a Salesman in 1949‚ Joseph Wood Krutch criticized the play for "its failure to go beyond literal meaning and its undistinguished dialogue. Unlike Tennessee Williams‚ Miller does not have a unique sensibility‚ new insight‚ fresh imagination or a gift for
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DEATH OF A SALESMAN Study Guide for Teachers World-Class Theatre in the Heart of Vermont 703 Main Stre e t ‚ W eston‚ V T 05161 www.westonplayhouse.o rg The Weston Playhouse Theatre Company The 2010 WPTC Teacher’s Workshop and the School Matinee and Touring Production is made possible in part by grants from: The Bay and Paul Foundations Mountain Room Foundation National Endowment for the Arts The Shubert Foundation The Vermont Country Store and The Orton Family Vermont Humanities Council
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Credit English December 19‚ 2001 Death of a Salesman; Movie vs. Book Death of a Salesman was both a great movie to watch and a great book to read. There were small differences‚ and since they are just about word for word from one another‚ the differences were usually just differences in the way one interpreted the book and envisioned the characters. The major difference I noticed was the way I pictured Linda and the way she was portrayed in the movie. Linda was not at all how I had imagined
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Death of a Salesman Act I Opening scene to Willy’s first daydream Summary The play begins on a Monday evening at the Loman family home in Brooklyn. After some light changes on stage and ambient flute music (the first instance of a motif connected to Willy Loman’s faint memory of his father‚ who was once a flute-maker and salesman)‚ Willy‚ a sixty-three-year-old traveling salesman‚ returns home early from a trip‚ apparently exhausted. His wife‚ Linda‚ gets out of bed to greet him. She asks if he had
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When it comes to comparing and contrasting two different cultures and morals the differences can be night and day. In Death Of A Salesman and Fences‚ these stories follow two middle-class families around the same time period (late 1940-1950’s)‚ who are both facing problems within their own household’s. From marital issues to failing father/son relationships‚ both of these stories paint a picture to the audience of what life in an urban family living in that time setting was like through the author’s
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friends are and how he could have killed himself when they were so close to paying off all of their bills. Biff recalls that Willy seemed happier working on the house than he did as a salesman. He states that Willy had all the wrong dreams and that he didn’t know who he was in the way that Biff now knows who he is. Charley replies that a salesman has to dream or he is lost‚ and he explains the salesman’s undaunted optimism in the face of certain defeat as a function of his irrepressible dreams of selling
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