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The genre of tragedy is an ancient form of entertainment that paradoxically offers the audience pleasure through the suffering of the characters. Death of a Salesman takes the form of a more modern tragedy, which deals with more current societal issues.
Death of a Salesman is the story of a salesman named Willy Loman, his family, and the tragedy surrounding his eventual suicide. Act 1: The story begins as Willy comes home from a long work trip. His two sons Happy and Biff are both visiting, and Willy complains to his wife Linda that Biff has yet to anything significant with his life. Meanwhile, Biff and Happy are discussing their lives, and begin to talk about buying a ranch out west and Willy slips into a daydream about his younger years. First he recalls a scene with his two boys, as they happily wash his car and joke with him affectionately. Then he begins to speak with Linda, and it is revealed that Willy isnt the salesman he makes himself out to be, as Linda draws the truth of an unsuccessful trip out of him. The daydream then becomes mixed in with another with some woman, who thanks Willy for the stockings he gave her. Then Willy returns to the prior dream, where he and Linda begin to argue about Biff. Willy then begins to dream about his brother Ben. The story then returns to the present, where Biff and Happy are arguing with Linda about Willys mental state. He is revealed to have been trying to commit suicide. He soon comes inside, and Biff cheers him up with prospects of going to get a loan from an old employer the next day. Act 2: Willy wakes and is told by Linda that he is to meet his sons for dinner that night. He leaves for work, and upon trying to convince his boss, Howard, to let him work in New York, gets nowhere. He begins to daydream again, and before long causes a commotion, at which point Howard fires him. Willy goes to his friend Charleys office, and speaks with Biffs childhood friend and Charleys son Bernard. Bernard asks why Biff didnt go to college, but Willy doesnt answer him. Willy asks Charley for a loan, at which point Charley offers Willy a job, but Willy refuses. Willy leaves to meet Biff and Happy for dinner. Biff has had no luck getting a loan from his ex-employer, but Willy refuses to believe it. Finally, Biff and Willy begin to argue almost violently, and Biff and Happy storm out of the restaurant. Willy slips into a daydream in which he is caught cheating on Linda by Biff. Back at home, hours later, the boys return home and Willy is in the back yard trying to plant seeds in the dark. He is talking to his dead brother Ben about a $20,000 proposition. He soon moves into the house, where he and Biff argue about the fact that Biff has done nothing with his life. Biff begins to cry, touching Willy. Willy begins to mutter about the $20k proposition, before driving the car off and committing suicide. Requiem: Linda, Biff, Happy, and Charley are at Willys funeral, where they discuss his life and his death. Happy vows to live up to his fathers name, whereas Biff decides to move back out west. Linda states that Willy is finally free.
Major Works Data Sheet As Death of a Salesman is a play, it is composed entirely of dialogue and stage directions, and there isnt really a point of view. Thus, there is also little style in terms of traditionally literary techniques. The entire story and its issues are revealed through the players speech and actions. The primary style of dialogue that reveals these things is the way the author throws Willy back into daydreams, thereby revealing the past that has created the drama of the present.
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Willy: Youre the best there is, Linda, youre a pal, you know that? On the road on the road I want to grab you sometimes and just kiss the life outa you (The laughter is loud now, and he moves into a brightening area at the left, where The Woman has come from behind the scrim and is standing, putting on her hat, looking into a mirror and laughing) The Woman: Me? you didnt make me Willy. I picked you. Willy: You picked me?
Memorable Quotes
Quote Willy: Its all right. I came back. Significance This is Willys first line of the play, but it epitomizes many of the events in the play, especially his hallucinations and daydreams. One general theme throughout the play is that Willy has worked all of his life for his boys and his family. But as hinted by this line, it seems that almost all of it has come to naught, now that they are gone. This line by Willy is indicative of two things. First, it shows the loopiness of Willys thoughts. He goes from calling Biff lost to stating that hes not lazy within two sentences. Secondly, it is representative of the respect and obsession that Willy has for his son Biff. This obsession becomes even clearer as the play progresses. This is part of a speech given by Linda to Biff and Happy towards the end of Act I, before Willy walks back into the kitchen to argue with Biff. It clearly shows the love and respect that Linda has for her husband. It also paints a picture of a man who has worked so hard all of his life, only to be rejected, even by his own sons. Furthermore, the passage demonstrates that Willy works for the benefit of his family.
Willy: Work a lifetime to pay off a house. You finally own it, and theres no one to live in it.
Willy: Biff Loman is lost. In the greatest country in the world a young man with such personal attractiveness, gets lost. And such a hard worker. Theres one thing about Biff hes not lazy.
Linda: He drives seven hundred miles, and when he gets there no one knows him anymore, no one welcomes him. And what goes through a mans mind, driving seen hundred miles home without having earned a cent? Why shouldnt he talk to himself? Why? When he has to go to charley and borrow fifty dollars a week and pretend to me that its his pay? How long can that go on? How long? You see what Im sitting here and waiting for? And you tell me he has no character? The man who never worked a day but for your benefit? When does he get the medal for that? Biff: Pop! Im a dime a dozen, and so are you!
This statement epitomizes the whole point of the play Willy Loman, the everyman, has been unable to come to terms with the fact that he and Biff are no extraordinary salesmen. They are a dime a dozen, and here Biff pleads with Willy to understand that.
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Adjectives Idealistic, delusional, kind-hearted, obsessive
Biff Loman
Biff is largely responsible for much of Willys unhappiness. Willy idolizes his elder son, so when Biff ends up unsuccessful, Willy turns bitter and becomes lost in the past. Linda constantly serves as Willys guiding force, always there for him and constantly loving him. She is probably the sole reason he maintains any sanity. Happy serves as a sort of foil to Biff, as a more successful but less loved son. His personality overcompensates for the fact that he is less esteemed than his older brother in the eyes of his dad. If Linda is the voice of love in the story, Charley is the voice of reason. He supports Willy financially without ever expecting any return. He was truly the only real friend Willy had.
Linda Loman
Happy Loman
Whimsical, idealistic
Charley
Realistic, kind
Bernard
Bernard is also a foil to Biff, but in a different way. He serves as Biffs rival in Willys mind, and Willy often criticizes him for not being well-liked. Ironically, he is successful in the end. Ben is Willys idol of success, and Willy allows his memories of Ben to lead him astray. She is the reason that Biff begins to resent Willy, which causes him to drop out of school. Symbolizes the new business world.
Kind, intelligent
Ben
Ambitious, unreal
The Woman
The woman Willy cheats with on a business trip. Willys boss. Restaurant keeper. Girls from the restaurant (probably prostitutes). Charleys secretary.
Flirtatious, unfaithful
Jenny
Impatient
This play is set in New York City, where the Lomans live and work. Most of the play takes place within the Loman household, particularly the kitchen. This set is described in detail in the stage instructions. Several scenes occur outside the house or in the bedrooms. In Act II, a couple of episodes take place in business offices in New York. Willy speaks with Howard Wagner in Mr. Wagners office, and then goes to Charleys office. And, of course, one of the most climactic scenes in the play takes place in Franks Chop House, a restaurant.
The opening scene of Death of a Salesman is important because it introduces all of the major characters as well as sets the ground for the social rifts within the family. The audience witnesses Willys first journey to the past, so they are able to compare the family of the past with the Lomans of the present. The conflict surrounding Biff and Willys failures in the business world is also quickly revealed.
Significance of the ending/closing scene
Symbols
The Car / Rubber Hose: Symbols of Willys desire to commit suicide Stockings: Representative of Willys unfaithfulness and conflict with Biff Diamonds: The source of Ben success, symbolic of success and ambition The Football: The football that Biff stole, symbolic of his failures and shortcomings Seeds: Symbolic of Willys desire to provide for his family
The ending scene of Death of a Salesman also serves as the climax of the play. All of the prior issues that Willy has been ignoring and Biff has been holding back come to the table, and Willy is forced to acknowledge the failure of his son, as well as his own failures. Furthermore, the scene becomes very intense once it becomes apparent that Willys $20,000 deal is his life insurance policy, and that Willy is contemplating suicide. The Requiem closes the story after Willys death, and shows where each character stands after the tragedy.
Works Cited
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