Character Analysis Of Death Of A Salesman By Arthur Miller

811 Words2 Pages

Robert Ross
Dr. Brown
English 1102
March 24, 2014
Word Count: 26
Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman: A Tale of Love, Pride, Betrayal and Friendship
Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman is quite a captivating piece of literature. I really thought this book was fantastic, even reading it for a second time. Since this is a play, the majority of the characterization had to be done through dialogue, but the astonishing depth of development that Miller achieved with his characters was astonishing. I truly felt that I intimately knew the characters by the end of the play despite how slim the volume was. Miller's play is an expose of the harsh reality of the American Dream, and while his play's message may not be hopeful, the honesty of his work will resonate with middle-class America even today. Miller's play showed me that not much has changed since post-WWII America. Average people are still struggling to capture the dream that we all feel this land offers us. Happy and Biff are the tragic characters that I hope never to become, but who can blame them for aspiring for something greater? Most disturbing of all, I truly hope that my parents' generation never fall victim to the same destructive hopes that possessed Willy Loman. Perhaps the scariest realization is that any one of us can get caught up in the delusion of what we believe we deserve.
I believe that the reason this play is so iconic is because it truly deals with the problems of "every man." Willy Loman had no super powers, he wasn't going through headline invoking problems. His issues and those of his family are things that many people seem to cope with in their day to day lives but they tend to turn a blind eye to seeing how it can truly break down someone's character. All ...

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...jumps between Willy's daydreams and reality and how totally plausible it all is. In an average day, distractions do appear in my thoughts, and Arthur Miller really did a good job of showing these random transitions. The story is also real in that the family frequently explodes on each other. I am not too enthralled by the play, only because it is not the kind of story I really adhere to, but I would certainly recommend it to anyone interested. I am more for action and adventure than this tale of a "housewife." Otherwise, I would honestly rate this book a five, so there is nothing I severely disliked. Along the same course, there is nothing for me to change if there is nothing outstandingly wrong or misplaced. Finally, I do not think this book or the story inside is similar to many other books I have read. I also doubt this kind of story is too common in book at all.

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