sra71.txt 4.1 KB

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  1. Death of a Salesman
  2. Willie Lowman is a character that most anyone can identify with. He has
  3. two sides to his life; On one side he creates an image of being
  4. successful, well liked, and bold. On the other side he feels old,
  5. unsuccessful, defeated and disliked. He maintains the successful image
  6. to comfort his wife and friends. This veil of success becomes thinner
  7. and thinner until he lingers between fantasy and reality of the cruel
  8. world, often changing back and forth in the course of a conversation.
  9. The core of Willie^s slow painful demise into nothingness is based upon
  10. his beliefs. Willie thinks that success is not what you know, but who
  11. he knows and how well he is liked. These beliefs he instills in his
  12. sons, who find themselves adrift and meaningless just like their
  13. father. In addition Willie sees the world changing, and his own
  14. inability to change with it, will seal his fate. He misses the open
  15. land and the smell of flowers in the summer, the pollution and high
  16. rise apartments add to Wil! lies dismal existence. An example of
  17. Willies shift from fantasy to reality is during his conversation with
  18. his wife about the Chevy. He thinks the car is fantastic, the best ever
  19. built. Later he and his wife discuss some bills that were paid, and
  20. when told about the bill to get the Chevy^s carburetor fixed, he says
  21. that they ought to prohibit the manufacture of the car.
  22. Willie Lowman is finding himself less and less capable. He dreams of
  23. making it big and has visions of Uncle Ben who gives him advice on how
  24. to get rich, but never the kind of advice Willie wants to hear. Willie
  25. is concerned about his image. He is a great showman who can brag and
  26. flaunt like the best of them, and as witness to the hard truth of his
  27. failure he continues to weave fairy tales and live in fantasy. Willie
  28. wants his sons to be better off and more successful than him, but he
  29. has already corrupted them, and they too claim achievements well beyond
  30. reality. Biff comes to the reality of his position in life in the
  31. opening of the play. He knows he is not cut out for the business world.
  32. Biff prefers to move back to Texas and work on a farm. Although he
  33. realizes working on the farm won^t make him successful, he knows that
  34. it^s his calling in life. Happy who is fairly stable and comfortable in
  35. his work, prefers to continue with the charade, and the deception so as
  36. long as it! makes life easier for him. Although his sons will not be
  37. successful, I think Willie Lowman did the best he could. Willie is not
  38. to blame for his sons disappointments, although he has delayed their
  39. success by giving them false ideas about success.
  40. The family situation is that of the standard dysfunctional family. The
  41. mother is upset by her sons because they have no respect for Willie and
  42. show no concern for his decline. Willie loves his wife, but often
  43. mistreats her, cuts he off in mid conversation and belittles her. Biff
  44. begins to hate his father because of the constant pressure to succeed,
  45. along with his fathers adultery and abuse of his mother. However Biff
  46. still cares very deeply for his father deep down inside. Willie^s
  47. favorite son is Biff; however Biff is also a continual source of
  48. disappointment for his father because of his inability to assert
  49. himself in the business world. Happy is most like his father in the way
  50. that he much prefers fantasy over reality. Happy is willing to continue
  51. with pretending everything is all right so as long as it makes life
  52. easier. The conflict is Willie versus nature. Nature being the
  53. environment and Willies inability to change and conform to it^s dynamic
  54. and changing nature. The characters in this play are easily understood
  55. because of their similarity to most people who find themselves washed
  56. up in this game called life. People watching the play can easily
  57. identify with these characters who represent the average working class
  58. family. Nobody wins in the end because it^s real life. The father kills
  59. himself, hoping that the insurance money will send his family on their
  60. way to success; and in actuality the insurance money from his death
  61. will heal no wounds, or right any wrongs.
  62. <br><br>
  63. Words: 734