Willy Loman as a Father in Death of a Salesman Essay

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    Happy Loman

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    book Death of a salesman is an oddity compared to other books. The characters in this book are all fictional but they could possibly be real. The first character that we are introduced to is Willy which is a traveling salesman, father and husband. He dreams of achieving an american dream type of lifestyle but due to many different scenarios he cannot achieve it. What makes is worse is that a father would hope that their children succeed because they couldn 't but that is not the case for willy.…

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    The Inevitable Death of a Salesman. Self reflection is not always the first instinct when faced with the war of reality. In the play, Death of a Salesman, Willy Loman struggled with creating his own reality instead of accepting that his actions led his life astray. This string of denial not only led to poor choice of careers and a separated family but also a fate for Willy that can never be unchanged; the inevitable death of a salesman. Willy, a businessman, had prided himself in his work,…

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    did not live up to its name. From the plays Death of a Salesman and Fences, the characters Willy Loman and Troy Maxson are two fathers who became tragic heroes that caused their own downfall due to their different outlooks on the American dream. Although both Willy and Troy had plenty in common, one man put too much faith in the American dream, while the other…

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    However, The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald, Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, and Fences by August Wilson paint a darker picture of this dream. Jay Gatsby died never quite achieving his image of the American Dream, Willy gave up on the American Dream and Cory hasn’t lost his hope for a bright future, and still lives to hopefully achieve the American Dream. America has a society which strives for success in every situation. Gatsby, Willy, and Troy, misunderstand the dream and turn it…

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    While Willy Loman is a travelling salesman in the early 1950s, one who goes from door to door selling merchandise, Don Draper is the creative director of a Madison Avenue advertising firm, Sterling Cooper, in the 1960s, whose modes of “selling” are the advertising ideas he pitches…

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    Life and Death of A Salesman The bond between a father and son is often said to be a unique and unfathomable one. However, it is a fragile bond that can be broken by the impact of worldly things. Since the affair between Willy Loman and the other woman, there has been a strain on his relationship with his son Biff. This is demonstrated through their constant fighting and their inability to spend time with each other; naturally, their relationship takes a turn for the worst. In the play “The…

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    “Death of a Salesman” by Arthur Miller details the last two days of William ‘Willy” Loman, a sixty-three year old salesman’s life. The plays shows Willy’s private conversations about his past and present, which all lead up to him eventually committing suicide. Willy Loman’s life philosophy would be best summed in a quote by Calvin Coolidge, a former president of the United States, “The chief business of the American people is business.” Willy took pride in being a salesman and earning a name…

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    In Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman", we are given a portrayal of the…

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    Among the characters is Willy Loman. Willy is portrayed as a very insecure and egocentric travelling salesman who have a very strong belief in the American dream pertaining to easy way of obtaining success and wealth acquisition. According to Nilsson et al (56), success can only be achieved through rigorous indulgent…

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    Willy Loman Shame

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    Shame, Guilt, Empathy, and the Search for Identity in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, Fred Ribkoff describes how the play, Death of a Salesman, by Arthur Miller, “dramatizes the way in which feelings of shame shape an individual’s sense of identity” (Ribkoff 121). The play’s protagonist, Willy Loman, has a distorted sense of himself. His true sense of identity is buried under many layers of denial and fanciful lies. Willy is aware of his shortcomings, yet due to the shame that they cause…

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