Death of A Salesman Notes
Death of A Salesman Notes
Death of A Salesman Notes
Ben represents all that Willy wishes the boys to be, yet his actions in the past are not firmly established. He
is, for Willy, a symbol of all that is "good in the land of opportunity"
The garden is symbolic of Willy needing to leave something behind for people to remember him by.
Society
Consumer society à pressures of advertising persuade people to acquire goods and to do so by paying for
them by instalments
Money defines success: people are judged by the amount they acquire, and the amount of success is linked
That is why Willy feels he has to succeed, and the only way to show his success is to acquire money and
material goods
Willy's America à land of opportunity in which ambition young people like Biff can accomplish great things
Real America; although it still may be the land of opportunity, it seems to have acquired a new set of values
Countryside is different from modern consumer society: the structure of society there is much simpler and
Willy feels that he has to be within society yet looks back to a golden age when life was simpler
Society in which the Lomans live is governed by people like Ben-ruthless managers who care little for the
opinions of others, and in such a society the Lomans, although they only occasionally realize it, are out of place
There are many forms of failure as well as success that are spawned by our American system. The Lomans
are all an example of what life is like if you continually live in a dream world and never train yourself for
anything. Ben is the exception in the Loman family. He is the only one of them to turn our successful. However,
Charlie and his son Bernard were able to achieve greatness and to make the system work for them. In the end,
the decision to make it in this American system is, ironically, up to the individual.
Absurdity of life
DS attempts to explore the implications of life for which men-not gods-are wholly responsible
Willy is disturbed by the element of rapid obsolescence which is a highly oppressive aspect of life
The play in general is a study of the circumstances which affect human destiny in the moral universe.
Death
Loman's suicide is obviously intended as a gesture of the hero's victory over circumstances
The exhausted, idealistic man who has visions of a great future for his sons does not in the end come to
terms with reality, but retains his hopes. To Willy, death is the only answer.
External conflicts
Loss of job and money defines success; by losing his job, Willy has let everyone down, most of all himself.
Internal conflicts
Inconsistencies which Willy displays shows the conflict inside of him. e.g. Willy says that his car is "the
greatest car ever built", but later contradicts himself when he changes his opinion to "that goddamn Chevrolet"
He has always been a figure of several faces to the boys he must be the successful father, to Linda the
Cannot accept the supposed hurt to his pride that a job offered by Charley might inflict upon him.
Importance of minor characters
Biff
lacks self assurance because of the uncertainty about his father's attitude towards him, and his doubts
Has not found his place in society, but also realizes that he does not fit into any of the openings that society
has made
Sees the city as a concrete jungle, but reuses to conform to the city's demands.
Linda
Tries to share in Willy's ideals, and suffers great torment as she observes Willy's decline knowing that she is
unable to help
Fails to understand what happens to Willy, and fails to fathom what has occurred between him and Biff, but
still manages to retain a belief in the need to treat human beings properly
Anger stems from her beliefs in the Loman family, and memories of happy times in the past
She is a woman struggling to come to terms with the city, her husband, and her sons
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 want 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
Likes women
Remains the Loman that he always was, incapable of interpreting the message of Willy's failure.
Ben
Willy's foil
Ruthless business man, rich adventurous, not confined by any psychological restraints
Acts as a mentor for Willy, Willy want Ben's story of success to happen to him
Is an example of the very small population who are successful without much work the dream of everyone is
himself as being
Willy's longing to be seen as a successful man and to be placed in a position where he can reach all the to
buyers is obviously connected to the woman, while it also reveals the superficiality of Willy's family life
His concern for Linda is genuine but his need for success overcomes his feelings of loyalty.
Howard
Represents the professional business man-consideration for the firm must come first. He has no sentiment
Miller attempted to personify certain values which civilized men in the twentieth century share
Seeks to discover a design in the paradoxical movement of life; to impose upon it a sense of meaning
His life's experiences seem to intermingle and disturb the logical flow of reality
Views his life as a totality. conventions of time and place are not relevant for him.
Wants to be loved by all; wants to succeed by terms that do not suit his nature; wants to leave his mark
Feels he has to succeed, and the only way to show his success is to acquire money and material goods. He
does not want to face the fact that he is not earning enough
When he finally evaluates his performance, he realizes that he has fallen far short of his goals at that point,
"Stream-of-consciousness"
Miller does not divide his vision of reality into discrete unit. He conceives Will's mind as a place ìout of timeî,
as a state in which all boundaries have been erased, in which all things are coexistent.
Aesthetic progression: a reconstruction of the movement of consciousness: the perception of facts, events,
and ideas; fears, passions, and superstitions; hope, dreams, and ambitions, in their various stages of maturity
and immaturity
The play is divided into three main parts, Act I, Act II, and the Requiem. Each section takes place on a
different day in present-day. Within Act I and Act II, the story is presented through the use of Willy's flashbacks.
This use of flashback is fundamental to the structure and understanding of the play
The story starts at present-day and Willy then lapses in and out of the past. Each flashback is somehow
related the present. Very often, the contents of the flashback offer essential background knowledge for
understanding why the present-day problems in the Loman family are occurring. For example, when Willy is
thinking about Biff and Biff's problems, Willy is transported to the summer of Biff's senior year. The events that
took place in the past expose for the reader the situations that have led up to the present-day boiling point in
delight, indignation and sympathy, pity and fear which Aristotle describes as "catharsis"
Tragic feeling is evoke when we are in the presence of a character who is ready to lay down hin life, if need
Miller's tragedy The result of an individual's quest for personal dignity and occurs when an individual
Tragic flaw an unwillingness to submit passively to the established order and values
In Willy's descent, there is a tragic paradox; for as he moves towards inevitable destruction, he acquires
that knowledge, that sense of reconciliation, which allows him to conceive a redemptive plan for his house
Loman, the contemporary her, embarks upon a most courageous Odyssey: the descent into the self, where
A small man, a mere failure who does not have the sufficient grace to warrant universal concern
Doesn't have just one tragic flaw - he has many (disloyal, headstrong, short tempered, proud, false, etc)
Everything that brings joy for Willy is associated with the past.
Setting
Set in twentieth-century industrial society, complete with apartment blacks, financial difficulties and
pressures to succeed
Willy's America - land of opportunity in which ambition young people like Biff can accomplish great things
Real Americà although it still may be the land of opportunity, it seems to have acquired a new set of values.
Style and language
"American drama" attempts to record the kinds of crisis that plagued their times
Staging
Because the play is about Willy's search rather than the socioeconomic environment in which his search
takes place, the play's setting is scrupulously devoid of detailed reminders of place and time
Ben's remarks, the flute music, and the voice of the Woman illustrate Miller's concept that everything exists
The Salesman image was from the beginning absorbed with the concept that nothing in life comes next, but
that everything exists together and at the same time within us; that there is no past to be brought forward' in a
human being but that he is his past at every moment and that the present is merely that which his past is
Music
o opening stage direction "a melody is heard, played upon a flute. It is small and fine, telling of grass
o flute is an instrument associated with nostalgia can be heard playing when Willy begins to imagine
o at times of promise of better things to come in the future, the music is "gay and bright" creating a
Light
o appartments are surrounded by "an angry glow of orange"...represents the anger of people who
fall in the city, who are deprived of promise, who, like Biff, are angered by the way of life.
Relationship with audience
Willy lives closer to our experience than many protagonists, he is struggling with the pressures of twentieth
century life: of money, of the city, of the family, of the job, while his weaknesses are those which ordinary
humans share. Loneliness, the inability to decide exactly what one wants, the breakdown of communications btw
the two generations, are all part of our lives to some extent. Miller shows that man is isolated, and, even though
o (a) Biff is the favorite son, and yet cannot live up to what Willy wants for him, nor can he really
o (b) gap of generations between father and son, a gap of ideals and one which Willy comes to see
o (c) Willy is unable to face the fact that Biff will never become a great man
o (d) Willy's hopes are so closely associated with Biff that he seems unable to remember for long
that Biff is a mature man, supposedly capable of making his own decisions.
General
DS is a statement about the nature of human crises in the twentieth century which seems, increasingly, to
whole of contemporary life. In this image, Miller brings into the theatre a figure, who is, in our age, a kind of
It is its intimate association with our aspirations which give to the story of Loman an ambiguous, but highly
The play grew from observations of ordinary life: a simple frame house filled with children who will grow
It is about the fabric of family life: the day-to-day banter among family members, as well as the moments
About failure and disillusionment, a boy's belief in his father and a father's dream for his sons and himself
Also celebrates humanity and the love between father and son
Moral ignorance is the most serious and most common indictment against humanity in our time.