Gender in Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller and Churchill´s Cloud Nine

1283 Words3 Pages

In my essay I’ve decided to examine how gender is presented on stage in Miller’s “Death of a Salesman” and Churchill’s “Cloud Nine”. More specifically, I will be looking at how both playwrights express the gender role of patriarchy in their male characters, Willy Loman and Clive. Gender, unlike the biological differentiation of sex, is a social condition that forms the basis of being a “male” or “female”. The role of patriarchy, as described by (renown feminist) Gerda Lerner, is “the manifestation and institutionalization of male dominance over women and children in the family” (1). This identity issue has since become very popular with play writers of sexual and gender politics in theatre, including Miller and Churchill.

Domination of the household is considered a crucial element of patriarchy. Both, “Cloud Nine” and “Death of a Salesmen” present this subject but in different manners.
In “Cloud Nine” Clive introduces himself at the beginning of the play as “…a father to the natives here and father to my family so dear”. The repeated use of the word “father” when mentioning his family and work in colonial Africa creates an alternative definition. Clive associates the word as a title or duty and because of this he dominates his family and work life in very similar ways. In the opening song, “Come Gather Sons of England” I feel the family should be marching in a straight line behind Clive and only step forward as he introduces them. Doing this would not only showcase his power to the audience but also show them how he commands his family like a general in an army rather than a loving husband and father. Clive later mentions to his own son, Edward that the reason he should love his father is because “through our father we love our...

... middle of paper ...

... good enough and trying to get a more successful job in Florida. Willy, like Clive cannot accept Biff for the person he really is, so is forced to pretend he cares about what his father wants. However, Willy mentions that his own father died when he was “three or four years old” leaving almost all of his life without a masculine figure to look up to. This leads me to agree with Neil Carson, in his book “Arthur Miller”. He says that, “Willy’s determination to give such a strong guidance to his son is a result in lack of such guidance in his own life.”
Both Clive and Willy make their son’s life miserable due to the expectation that they want to be exactly like them. But, Willy’s actions are perhaps not as intentional because his own father died and so is instead guided by society. Clive, on the hand is purposely chooses to be ignorant about what his own son wants.

Open Document