"After all highways, trains, and years, you will die more than living" (Miller, 98). Arthur Miller plays the death of a salesman: the hero of Willy Lohman told this sentence. This tragedy occurred in Connecticut in the late 1940s. This is the story of an American dream, a salesman fighting betrayal and abandonment, Willy Roman and his family. Willy Lohman is a failed salesman, recently downgraded to a fee and can not pay the invoice. He married a woman named Linda and had two sons, Bif and happiness.
Salesman's Death: Analysis of Arthur Miller's salesman's death is an obsession that the blind belief of the wrong idea of American dreams destroys his life, almost ruining his life It shows that there is. Willie Lohmann, the main character of Miller, does not know how to believe that success comes from people who always like and look good. His failure is that he does not equate success with effort and perseverance. This wrong idea was unable to achieve him
Some letters in development literature that Arthur Miller lost salesmen might have something that greatly influences literature. These characters occupy an important position in literary works. In the death of Arthur Miller 's salesman, Ben Lohman appeared. This is Willie's brother of the hero. Ben has a short-lived part of the play, but he influenced the theme and development of other characters. The theme of salesman's death is to be honest with yourself.
Ben-Ari Rowe British Lady III March 24, 1998 Death of a salesman's death salesman Death of a salesman of Arthur Miller is a controversial game for a typical American family who wants to realize an American dream Drama is often Failed, salesman's death made a dream failure a written "(Cohen 51). The story is a 34-year-old travel salesman Willie Roman's delusive eyes and thoughts, eventually by his lying fantasy world Spoken ... "products not worth in capitalist society" or "ordinary people". Carefully refer to the drama, evaluate both interpretations, and rate what Miller thinks to show through his role. In 1949, Arthur Miller's "death of a salesman" created Willy Roman who was absorbed in life.