"Willy Wonka" Essays and Research Papers

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    struggle to leave his mark upon the world. Willy Loman‚ the play’s central character‚ is often considered to be its’ ‘tragic hero’. The salesman grows increasingly disillusioned throughout the course of the play to the point where he eventually takes his own life. Willy’s life is a never-ending dream where he tries to persuade himself and others that he and his sons are successful‚ but‚ in the end Willy is unable to live up to his own expectations. Willy is little more than a failure and a crazed

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    perceives “The American Dream”. Willy Loman believes in “The American Dream” and is constantly striving to live by it. Willy is a very insecure salesman who is unable to provide financial support for his family. He imagines that “The American Dream” stands on the pillars of being well liked and aesthetically appealing to those who he surrounds himself with. It is unclear to him that as a salesman‚ that he must be able to sell the product as well as his personality. Willy believes that success and goals

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    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 an automobile accident‚ since he once drove off a bridge into a river. Irritated‚ he replies that nothing happened. Willy explains that he kept falling into a trance while driving—he reveals

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    Success is Misguided Willy Loman‚ the main character in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman‚ is idealistic‚ stubborn and has a false sense of importance. He exhibits skewed perceptions of society that have a negative impact on him and his family. Willy believes that his philosophy of life is one that will guarantee himself and his family a life of wealth and success. Willy cannot achieve this success because his perceptions and methods to obtain it are wrong. Willy thinks that a part of a

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    to be the way they are in the present‚ as well as their present actions. The main characters defined are Willy and Biff. Willy Loman is a salesman who views success as being well liked rather than being of monetary value. His past success dies down over the years and he refuses to accept it. He stubbornly believes his past of being well liked will drive him towards a better future. "Willy: I’m talking about your father! There were promises made across this desk! [...] I put thirty-four years into

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    Biff’s father Willy simply cannot accept him. Biff is forced to be someone he is not for so long that he loses his true self altogether. As a result‚ he falls into a despair he cannot understand the genesis of. Additionally‚ Willy ruins Biff’s future and character. Beyond all the other characters of the play‚ Willy hurts Biff the most because Willy attacks Biff’s fundamental identity. Willy in effect steals Biff’s identity by forcing Biff to be the person he himself wants to be. Willy lives vicariously

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    Illusion vs. Reality In Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman‚ Willy Loman cannot decipher the difference of illusion and reality. He roams around in a dream-like state- confused‚ and unaware of reality. Due to his inability to remain focused on the truth‚ a constant struggle developed inside of him‚ engulfing Willy’s thought process. In the end‚ Willy’s inability to accept reality results in his death. Willy Loman‚ a salesman from New York‚ was an extremely confused man. He worked a job in which

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    is a major theme and source of conflict. Willy‚ main character of the play‚ has a hard time distinguish between reality and illusion. His flashbacks‚ mostly back to the time when Biff was still in his high school year‚ always overlap with the present days. He cannot see who he and his sons are. He believes his elder son‚ Biff‚ and his youngest son‚ Happy‚ are great and successful and cannot accept the fact that they are not. Biff cannot see the illusion Willy lives in‚ as well as the reality he is

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    limits that Willy Loman faces are human flaw and delusional personality. Death of a Salesman is a story about a mentally disturbed man named Willy Loman and how he lives his life before his death. Willy has many flashbacks and illusions throughout the novel explaining the many reasons why he decides to choose death over life. Many critics have questioned and debated whether or not Death of a Salesman can be categorized as a tragedy. Death of a Salesman is classified as a tragedy because Willy Loman experiences

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    possible‚ while some attack the problem to get it out of the way. The book Death of a Salesman‚ is written by Arthur Miller. It takes place at Willy Loman’s - A 63 year old once popular salesman who’s lost his popularity and sales‚ not to mention his mind‚ small house in New York surrounded by apartments. Biff‚ a thirty-four year old son of Willy who has been searching for himself while working on farms in the west to the dismay of his father‚ returns from the west to visit his family although

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