...where they would have to leave for weeks at a time, the salesman would always find time for his or her family. The salesman name is Willy in which his family is mentioned throughout the play. At the beginning his wife Linda, is always very supportive of his views towards his sales career as Willy has to make sales all over the United States and travels a lot in order to make his career strong. Willy Loman, an old salesman, returns early from a business trip. After nearly crashing multiple times, Willy has a moment of enlightenment and realizes he shouldn't be driving. Seeing that her husband is no longer able to do his job as a traveling salesman, Willy's wife, Linda, suggests that he ask his boss, Howard, to give him a local office job at the New York headquarters. Willy thinks that getting the new job is a sure thing since he (wrongly) sees himself as a valuable salesman. We begin to learn some family background and hear about Willy and Linda's grown sons, Biff and Happy. Biff has just returned home from working as a farmhand in the West. Willy thinks Biff could easily be rich and successful, but is wasting his talents and needs to get on track. Willy thinks Biff is being wishy-washy to spite him. Later that night, Willy starts having flashbacks and talking to imagined images as if they were real people. Willy is ranting so loudly that Happy and Biff wake up. The brothers are worried, as they have never seen...
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...To the left and up a little is a second story bedroom with only a brass bed and a straight chair. Above the unseen living room is another bedroom with two beds; a stairway at the left curves up to the room from the kitchen. The empty stage between the house and the audience is the back yard, the scene of Willy's imaginings, as well as the city scenes. Whenever the action of the play is in the present, the characters act as if the imaginary walls are real and they enter and exit rooms only through doors. But when the action is in a memory, the characters step through the walls and onto the forestage. Willy Loman, a sixty-year-old traveling salesman, enters his home late at night with two large sample cases. His wife, Linda, hears him coming up the stairs to their bedroom. She seems worried that something has happened, that he has wrecked the car again, or that he's ill, but Willy assures her that he is fine, just tired. Sitting on the bed with her, he explains that he came home because he was having trouble staying on the road while he drove, and he is unsure of what caused his distraction. It could've been the coffee he had at a roadside diner or the way he opened the windshield of the car and the scenery and sunshine just washed over him. Whatever it was, it kept taking his mind of the road, and he'd veer onto the shoulder before he knew what was happening. He was so spooked that he drove ten miles an hour all the way home, and now he's tired and grumpy because he's going to...
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...through the life of Willy Loman, a pathetic, self-deluded salesman. The play follows the family through painful conflicts, significant issues such as national values, and the price of blind fate while working toward the ‘American Dream’. The major problem woven into the plot discusses how Willy, insufficiently, attempts to be able to die ‘the death of a salesman’, both wealthy and comfortable. In this play, the American character is criticized because the play emphasizes how children are a result of their parents modeling by including examples such as how Biff and Happy, the unsuccessful children, believe that lying, cheating, and stealing are tolerable because of the example Willy set for them. Furthermore, through Willy’s shallow contemptuous personality, the reader clearly sees that he finds lying, cheating and stealing acceptable. This shows not only in his actions and words, but also through his sons who imitate his values. As Happy, Biff, and Willy are conversing, Biff mentions that he practices with a new football. When Biff is asked where it came from, he simply says, “Well, I borrowed it from the locker room” (Miller 29). This statement combines both lying and stealing, because as Biff tries to cover the fact that he stole the ball. Willy does nothing to punish him or acknowledge that Biff committed a wrongful act. He instead insinuates that Biff deserves to practice with a regulation ball. Biff gets these churl traits from his father because Willy also commits similar...
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...an appreciation for the present. Miller's character Willy Loman is convinced attractiveness, popularity, and physical prowess is all any man needs for prosperity. In the beginning, Miller introduces Willy's flawed insight linking personal attractiveness to success. Act I opens with a conversation between Willy and his wife, Linda. While discussing their son, Biff, Willy wonders how, “a young man with such – personal attractiveness, gets lost” (Miller 1237). Proudly, Willy continues his high praise asking Linda if she remembers how they all used to follow Biff around in high school and, “When he smiled … their faces lit up” (1237). As critic, Chester E. Eisinger points out, Willy so thoroughly indoctrinates his sons with his dreams of success they, are victims of illusions” (Eisinger 101). They invent, “impossible schemes for making money,” (101). Willy’s corruption, “prevents his sons from achieving a mature manhood” (101). Willy even stoops to dishonesty and self-destruction in his efforts to appear successful. His appreciation for physical appearance extends to his belief that he must appear to be the ultimate salesman. Miller then illustrates Willy's belief that popularity or being well liked opens all doors to prosperity in life. When Biff is in high school, Bernard tries to warn Willy he, “heard Mr. Birnbaum say that if [Biff] don’t start studyin’ math, he’s gonna flunk [and] …won’t graduate” (Miller 1246). Then Willy tells Bernard not to...
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...1. Biff is in identity diffusion at the earliest point of his life, during the play. Biff has not yet experienced any identity crisis yet. To this point he has always been the popular jock who gets all of the girls. He has had everything handed to him on a silver platter, and has never had to work at anything besides football. Biff has not explored any alternatives to his identity because he hasn’t had to, who wouldn’t want to be in his shoes when they are his age? He has obviously not thought about occupational interests because he does not care about his grades in high school, which lead to getting into a good college, which leads to getting a good job. Right now Biff is only concerned about football and girls. 2. Biff’s identity as an adolescent was the typical jock, popular guy as explained in the earlier question. Biff very obviously went through identity diffusion as he was in his adolescence. Biff had dreams of potential scholarships to play football, which is what he was concerned about. He thought because of was good at football and having a good chance of getting a scholarship to good schools he thought that he would be given passing grades in high school. Biff failed math during the last semester of his senior year, thus resulting in not having enough credits to graduate. Then found that Willy had been unfaithful, which caused him to lose all faith in Willy. Biff then fell into identity foreclosure. Biff had committed to becoming a business man like Willy. Biff...
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...is a kind and caring wife of Willy. She is a type of character where she refuses to see beyond Willy’s lies and protect him instead. I think that Linda tries to understand Willy but at times she doesn’t get the big picture of Willy’s life. She doesn’t know about his finances, job, or his affair with another woman. In the play, at times I would say Linda is a submissive wife and mother. Linda is somewhat like a submissive wife because she doesn’t know why she defends her husband’s behavior even when he lashes out at her. For example, in the play, Willy and Biff get into a fight and Linda tries to defend both sides but Willy tells Linda to shut up and doesn’t let her talk. I think that Linda lets Willy yell at her that way because she has always been treated like this by Willy. Another thing that lets the reader know that Linda is a caring mother is that she expresses concern over Biffs’ poor grades in math. She also wants to make Biff change and be a better person by not trying to be aggressive around Willy and to not have a tendency to steal from others. For example, unlike Willy when Biff steals a football from the school’s locker room, Willy tells Biff to go return it. However, Willy gives in and tells Biff to keep it to practice and that the football coach won’t mind. When I think of if Linda has a realistic view of her sons, I see that it is not realistic. Linda wants her sons to do well in school and give attention to their father. However, Biff and Happy don’t give much attention...
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...year Willy Loman lives a life of traveling and selling, but as his age increases his mental state declines. In Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, we follow a delusional, suicidal man who is forced to face the harsh truth of his life. Throughout this play, Willy reimagines his life as he saw, but is really running from the truth with his delusions of grandeur. He believes he plays an important role in his job, his oldest son Biff is a prodigy, and that his is going to make it out alive. As readers watch Willy’s mental state unravel, his death is inevitable and unavoidable. The death of Willy Loman rests in the hands of his son Biff; once his true identity is revealed it’s too much for his father to bare. Biff is the apple of his father’s eyes, he was a football star, an aspiring salesman, and idolized his father. In many of Willy’s delusions we see him...
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...began to deteriorate, the entire family unraveled. Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman displays how the relationship between Willy and his two sons creates the downfall of the Loman family. The relationship is constantly changing throughout the story. Biff and Happy idolize and have nothing but love for their father when they are children, but when they grow up they realize how their father failed to prepare them for the real world. Willy Loman is portrayed as an un-fit father. Willy never really had a father when he was growing up. He lost his father when he was very young. Because Willy was deprived of affection as a child, he smothers his sons with love and oppresses them with the nakedness of his hopes for their success. (Carson pg. 92) His older brother Ben stepped in and served as a substitute father. (Carson pg. 90) As a result of not having a true father figure in his childhood, Willy struggled with fatherhood because had no example to base his parenting on. When Ben passed away, Willy lost his last connection to his father. (Carson pg. 91) Willy’s lack of a real father has left him as an insecure person. He has been trying his whole life to compensate for his loss. Willy is constantly unsure of himself and the way he raises his boys. This can be seen in the scene where he is imagining his dead brother Ben is visiting. Willy says “Dad left when I was such a baby and I never had a chance to talk to him and I still feel — kind of temporary about myself...
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...“Death of a Salesman” by Arthur Millar is a play about a man (Willy Lowman) who is so obsessed with success that he has deluded himself with the fact that he is himself successful. Throughout the play arguments occur between Biff (Willy’s son) and Willy, the contrast between these two characters reveals the main concern which is Willy’s obsession with success. Throughout the play there are many flashbacks to when Biff and Happy (Willy’s other son), in these we see that Biff is very much his father’s favourite as he is a very good sports athlete. When we are brought back into the current time we can see that the tables have been turned and now Happy is his father’s favourite. We find out that this is because Biff moved away from home in order to work outdoors on a farm, his father resents him for this as he wanted him to go into a sales job like him. Happy on the other hand has followed in his father’s footsteps and went into a sales job. Willy refers to his brother Ben throughout the play and often has visions where he is speaking to him. He refers to him as Ben was Successful “The man knew what he wanted and went out and got it! Walked into a jungle and comes out, the age of twenty-one, and he's rich!” This again proves that Willy is obsessed with success. it is almost as if this is the only thing that keeps him alive is the constant search for success, because he does not have this he lies to all his family by telling them that “I'm the New England man. I'm vital in New England...
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...Willy’s character? (Bradford,1) Willy Loman’s father left his family and was out of his childhood when Wily was only 3 years eleven months old. As a result Willy was a failure of a father to his sons. By not having his father in his life, Willy did not know or learn how to be a good father to Biff and Happy. In the play, Death of a Salesman, written by Arthur Miller, the main character Willy is a husband, father, friend, business partner and salesman. Willy is not very good at any aspects of his life, particularly parenthood. The factors in which Willy fails at parenting are numerous including, not making his family number one priority, not disciplining his sons, encouraging bad behaviours, not admitting his faults and lying. Firstly, with Willy not making his family his number one priority, he does this by constantly putting work before them. Willy has never been there for his sons, as he is travelling every week to visit customers, and he never really had the chance to get to know, and show his love for his sons. Willy does not have the father-son relationship with his children that most fathers desire to have. Willy’s love for his eldest son Biff, is based solely on Biffs achievements as a football player. Biff has been offered '...scholarships to three universities...' (Miller 20), and when he fails math, and because of poor grades does not qualify for the university scholarship, Willy is devastated for his son. Willy states, "Biff is a lazy bum!" (Miller 5)...
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...Death of a Salesman, the character of Biff, although he is hesitant to admit it, shares many emotional characteristics with his father, Willy. This may be due to the fact that both men have similar relationships and feelings about their fathers, whom they both resented and, at the same time, aimed to please. This causes...
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...Willy lives in the past and goes back to his children’s time in high school to make himself feel like they will have the American Dream. Willy and his children don’t always get along which leads to a lot of fighting. Willy is suicidal and Linda, his wife, is always trying to keep the peace between all of them. Biff, Willy’s oldest son, was a great baseball player in his high school time and he had moved around a lot and through his life away. Happy, Willy’s youngest son, has his own apartment. Biff and Happy had come back home to visit. Happy and Biff well visiting they dream up an idea to start a sports goods store of their own but just need someone to invest in their plan. This plan is a way for them to show their father that they can make it big one day. Next, Willy gets fired and Biff did not get his appointment with Oliver, their target investor for the sports goods store. Their dinner, a celebration of the reemergence of their past potential for success, did not go as planned as Biff did not get the big deal with Oliver. That night Biff and Willy had a fight while Happy and Linda were trying to keep peace between them. Everyone went to bed while Willy stayed downstairs eventually he leaves and dies in a car...
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...between Willy the father and Biff the older son. It is also causing problems within Willy himself. Willy lost his job and he wants his son Biff to follow his footstep when Biff returns home. Willy wants Biff to be a sales man and get good money but Biff does not want to do that. Biff wants to do his own thing, he does not want to follow his dads’ footsteps and be a sales men, he want to be his own...
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...father Charley said "he is going to argue a case in front of the Supreme Court” (Miller 95). This is ironic as Willy himself said Bernard would never be successful and Biff would be fantastic. When it turns out Bernard is super successful Willy is confused as to why Bernard was successful and Biff not. Bernard’s success is difficult for Willy to accept because his own sons’ lives do not measure up. From Bernard’s super ego, he is humble, reserved and honest. He actually has some self-confidence, unlike Willy; Bernard doesn't need to brag to everyone to make himself feel better. At one point in the play, Willy is shocked to find that Bernard ends up being a lawyer in his adulthood and goes off to argue a case before the Supreme Court. The Quotes are “Biff, where are you? You’re supposed to study with me today” (Miller 32). “Biff, Listen Biff, I heard Mr. Birnbaum say that if you don’t start studyin’ math he’s gonna flunk you and you won’t graduate. I heard him!” (Miller 32). “Just because he printed University of Virginia on his sneakers doesn’t mean they’ve got to graduate him, Uncle Willy.” These three quotes are from the same page and basically they have the same meaning This shows Bernard is the only one understands the reality. Bernard knows that the American dream is just a dream and he knows that without hard work he cannot be successful. He cares for Biff and wants to see him graduate. This is why he is constantly...
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...Death of a Salesman Ceena Kebriti JKR How does the Willy/Biff relationship reveal some of the plays important ideas? In Arthur Miller’s ‘Death of a Salesman,’ Willy and Biff’s relationship is used to demonstrate very important ideas in the play. As a father is so important in a boy’s childhood, Willy’s life has a strong influence in Biff’s decisions. A father has a different connection than a mother, (in this case Linda) and relate uniquely. A father should know when to play an active role in his son’s life, or when to stay passive and let him make his own decisions and learn from them. In this case Willy’s parenting style doesn’t allow Biff to grow independent, learn moral lessons, and realize the importance of education. The first theme that their relationship highlights is the ‘American Dream.’ Willy has always had his mind set on the idea that if you are well liked you can succeed. He also saw being a salesman as the best job you could get. ‘Bernard can get the best marks in school… you are going to be five times ahead of him.’ Here we see that Willy is teaches his boys his reading of society that being well liked is more important than a good education. However, later in the play Miller makes it obvious that this is not true. ‘How do you like this kid? Gonna argue a case in front of the Supreme Court.’ Miller through stage directions, makes Willy happy for Bernard’s success, but shocked and pained by the fact that he succeeded, in...
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