Personal Dirality In Arthur Miller's Death Of A Salesman

1193 Words3 Pages

Personal dignity refers to the individual or group's sense of self-respect and self-worth. Arthur Miller in his book, "Death of a Salesman" dramatizes and explores the concept of self-dignity by expressed to the reader through the life of Willy Loman the main character of the play, whose memories, dreams, sentiments, and arguments of the last 24 hours in a play to demonstrate to the reader that sometimes, self-dignity is the only thing that a person can remain with after losing everything in life. Willy Loman after discovering that his personal choices have caused him to lose almost everything important in his life decides to cling to his personal dignity. The fact that, he is 62 years old means that at some point in life he will have to dependent on his family to survive. He therefore, chooses to sacrifice his life for sake of creating a stable future for his son Biff, and save himself, from the embarrassment of being a dependant, simply because he was indecisive kind of man. This paper discusses the similarities between main characters in Arthur Miller's Will and Biff, and Janie in "Their Eyes are Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston in the
However, all the three men that he marries treat her bad and control her life. She does not meet her expectations of love, respect, and caring, leaves his past two marriages seeking for love but she does not enjoy a full blossom of love. Janie also realizes that; unless you do something seek it yourself, just the way people pray to God individually for their different needs. Therefore, when comparing Willy Loman from "Death of a Salesman" and Janie from, "Their Eyes were Watching God," in the context of who best achieved individuation, Willy Loman comes out as the winner, because, he sacrificed his own life to restore the dignity of his family and his own self-dignity (Hurston,

Open Document