DEATH
OF A SALESPERSON
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Arthur Miller
was born in New York, in 1915, to middle class
parents. His father was an Austrian Jewish manufacturer
and his mother was a schoolteacher. The Great
Depression of 1929 brought the family's opulence
to an end. During the Depression, Miller recalls
the family house in Brooklyn being constantly
visited by boastful salesman uncles. Far from
being a brilliant student, the young Miller was
more of an athlete, but he worked several menial
jobs to pay for his college education. While at
the University of Michigan, Miller began to write
plays and afterward made his living writing scripts
for radio.
"A number of awards for his
stage plays followed but the enormous success
of Death of a Salesman in 1949 established him
as a major dramatist. "(Robert W. Corrigan,
Arthur Miller, 1969)
He was married briefly to Marilyn
Monroe in the 50's and wrote the screenplay for
the film The Misfits, in which she starred. A
realist, Miller wrote plays chiefly concerned
with social issues, family relationships and the
place of the individual in society.
Death of a Sales Person
Willy Loman is, for Miller, the antithesis of
the classic tragic hero. As his name implies,
he is a low man, an ordinary man, whose dreams
and expectations have been shattered by the false
values of the society he has put his faith in.
Unlike the heroes of classical tragedy, he is
not a man of stature or noble purpose but he commands
our respect and pity because he pursues his dream
with a passionate intensity that makes him unique
and gives him a heroic quality.
"Willy was flawed in many
ways, it is not simply this, but the social forces
beyond his control that lead to his downfall."
(Steve Centola, The Achievement of Arthur Miller:
1995)
In Death of a Salesman, Miller
is not so much calling into question the pursuit
of the American Dream, but the dream itself. For
Willy, his adventurer / explorer brother, Ben,
and his salesman hero, Dave Single man, are images
of success, but the character of Ben is fantastic
and the achievements of Dave are idealized and
embellished. Using these as his benchmarks, Willy
can never achieve the success he so desperately
craves. Through a series of flashbacks in the
play, where we witness Willy's persistent efforts
to make the American Dream a reality for himself
and his family, Miller launches a scathing attack
on the very notion of the dream. He questions
the values upon which American society is based
and the way in which these contribute to the destruction
of a man such as Loman.
Unable to achieve the desired success in his own
career, he becomes preoccupied with ensuring the
success of his two sons, in particular that of
Biff who, he is convinced, is destined for greatness
in his sporting, professional and social life.
Sadly, his over zealous attempts serve only to
reinforce Biff's sense of inadequacy and lack
of identity. Willy realizes toward the end of
the play that he doesn't need to sell himself
to his family, who loves him despite his failings.
His suicide, an act in defiance of the system,
which until now has defeated him, is also a tragic
attempt to salvage something of his dream.
"I was convinced only that
if I could make him remember enough he would kill
himself, and the structure of the play was determined
by what was needed to draw up his memories like
a mass of tangled roots without end or beginning."
(Gerald Clifford Weales, Arthur Miller, 1995)
According to Miller, "it
is this readiness to lay down his life to secure
his dream that makes Willy a tragic yet heroic
figure and one to whom, in Linda's words, attention
must be finally paid." (Helene Wickham Koon,
1983)
Linda his loyal and loving wife
supports him in both his fantasies and failures
and her life seems to be entirely absorbed into
his. Linda is not part of the solution but rather
part of the problem with this dysfunctional family
and their lack of ability to see things for what
they really are. Louis Gordon is in harmony stating,
Linda, as the eternal wife and mother, the fixed
point of affection both given and received, the
woman who suffers and endures, is in many ways,
the earth mother who embodies the play's ultimate
moral value, love. But in the beautiful, ironic
complexity of her creation, she is also Willy's
and their sons' destroyer. In her love Linda has
accepted Willy's Greatness and his dream, but
while in her admiration for Willy her love is
powerful and moving, in her admiration for his
dreams, it is lethal. She encourages Willy's dream,
yet she will not let him leave her for the New
Continent, the only realm where the dream can
be fulfilled. She wants to reconcile father and
son, but she attempts this in the context of Willy's
false values. She cannot allow her sons to achieve
that selfhood that involves denial of these values.
Linda is also caught up in Willy's lies and therefore
does nothing but help fuel the fire in the inferno
of their dreams and ambitions. She lets this whole
masquerade continue right in front of her instead
of doing something to stop their out of control
lies.
References
Helene Wickham Koon, Twentieth
Century Interpretations of Death of a Salesman,
Edinburgh, 1983, pg 127.
Robert W. Corrigan, Arthur Miller:
A Collection of Critical Essays, New York, 1969,
pg 22.
Steve Centola, The Achievement
of Arthur Miller: New Essays, Texas, 1995, pg
55.
Gerald Clifford Weales, Arthur
Miller: Death of a Salesman Text and Criticism,
New York, 995, pg 84.
http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/univ/deathsalesman.html
http://www.death-of-a-salesman-essays.com/links.html
http://www.nv.cc.va.us/home/aryan/English242/miller.htm
http://www.canoe.ca/TheatreReviews/death_salesman.html
Yukl, Gary.
Leadership in Organizations Englewood Cliffs,
NJ:
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