Willy always has a dream, but he never works for them to realize his dreams. In one of his dreams, he said, "Someday I have my own business and I will never leave home again" (Miller 30). Willy was talking about how he moved to the country, built a guesthouse for boys, and had a nice garden. In the Loman family, they are all dreamers (Linda is not that much) and they are not doing everything they can do to achieve their dreams and goals.
Arthur Miller 's salesman' s death was focused on American dreams, or at least Willy Lohmann 's version. Willy is an unfortunate salesman. He "buys" beliefs about American dreams, and the majority of difficulties in his life are the result. * Many people believe in American dreams and their role in shaping people's success. Willy may have succeeded, but something did not go wrong. He made his sons believe in American dreams, neither succeeded.
When such ambition was unrealistic, Arthur Miller 's salesman' s death attacked America 's dream. Miller's drama is different from American beauty in that it explores Marxist attitude towards the success of the United States. The death of a salesman is the death of sales brought by capitalism. Miller explores the state of death of American dreams for society and individuals caused by individuals such as Willy Lohmann. Miller, influenced by Marxism and promoting the self-liberation of the working class, shows that the lives of all the workers are very difficult and that everything in life is worth fighting. Willy hopes he will not need to try if he is very popular. "A man is an accomplishment of success ... When entering the jungle and turning 21, he is rich," he depended on his American promise to appeal to his brother Ben.
Arthur Miller's play "Death of a salesman" is often regarded as the first modern American tragedy. Mirror Hero Willy Loman (ordinary person) and his family as the main character, using American Dream as the basis of American values and morals. Due to Willie and his family's character, Miller is using drama to convey the tragic result of selfless devotion to his dreams. "Salesman's death," Arthur Miller's classical tragedy in Aristotle's sense, it is also a capitalist material version of American dream empty promise, as well as sharp criticism of capitalism,