Key Facts
FULL TITLE • Death of a Salesman:
AUTHOR • Arthur Miller
TYPE OF WORK • Play
GENRE • Tragedy, social commentary, family drama
CLIMAX • The scene in Frank’s Chop Hou and Biff’s final confrontation with Willy at home PROTAGONISTS • Willy L oman, Biff Loman
ANTAGONISTS • Biff Loman, Willy Loman, the American Dream
SETTING (TIME) • “Today,” that is, the prent; either the late 1940s or the time period in which the play is being produced, with “daydreams” into Willy’s past; all of the action takes place during a twenty-four-hour period between Monday night and Tuesday night, except the “Requiem,” which takes place, presumably, a few days after Willy’s funeral
SETTING (PLACE) • According to the stage directions, “Willy Loman’s hou and yard [in Brooklyn] and . . . various places he visits in . . . New York and Boston”
FALLING ACTION • The “Requiem” ction, although the play is not really structured as a classical drama
邮箱邮箱TENSE • Prent
FORESHADOWING • Willy’s flute theme foreshadows the revelation of his father’s occupation and abandonment; Willy’s preoccupation with Linda’s stockings foreshadows his affair with The Woman; Willy’s automobile accident before the start of Act I foreshadows his suicide at the end of Act II
TONE • The tone of Miller’s stage directions and dialogue ranges from sincere to parodying, but, in general, the treatment is tender, though at times brutally honest, toward Willy’s plight THEMES • The American Dream; abandonment; betrayal
MOTIFS • Mythic figures; the Ame rican West; Alaska; the African jungle
SYMBOLS • Seeds; diamonds; Linda’s and the womon’s stockings; the rubber ho
Analysis of Major Characters
Willy Loman
Despite his desperate arching through his past, Willy does not achieve the lf-realization or lf-knowledge typical of the tragic hero. The quasi-resolution that his suicide offers him reprents only a partial discovery of the truth. While he achieves a professional understanding of himlf and the fundamental nature of the sales profession, Willy fails to realize his personal failure and betrayal of his soul and family through the meticulously constructed artifice of his life. He cannot grasp the true personal, emotional, spiritual understanding of himlf as a literal “loman” or “low man.” Willy is too driven by his own “willy”-ness or perver “willfulness” to recognize the slanted reality that his desperate mind has forged. Still, many critics, focusing on Willy’s entrenchment in a quagmire of lies, delusions, and lf-deceptions, ignore the significant accomplishment of his partial lf-realization. Willy’s failure to recognize the anguished love offered to him by his family is crucial to the climax of his torturous day, and the play prents this incapacity as the real tragedy. Despite this failure, Willy makes the most extreme sacrifice in his attempt to leave an inheritance that will allow Biff to fulfill the American Dream. Ben’s final mantra—“The jungle is dark, but full of diamonds”—turns Willy’s suicide into a metaphorical moral struggle, a final skewed ambition to realize his full commercial and material capacity. His final act, according to Ben, is “not like an appointment at all” but like a “diamond . . . rough and
hard to the touch.” In the abnce of any real degree of lf-knowledge or truth, Willy is able to achieve a tangible result. In some respect, Willy does experience a sort of revelation, as he finally comes to understand that the product he lls is himlf. Through the imaginary advice of Ben, Willy ends up fully believing hi s earlier asrtion to Charley that “after all the highways, and the trains, and the appointments, and the years, you end up worth more dead than alive.”
小虎神探队
Biff Loman
Unlike Willy and Happy, Biff feels compelled to ek the truth about himlf. While his father and brother are unable to accept the mirable reality of their respective lives, Biff acknowledges his failure and eventually manages to confront it. Even the difference between his name and theirs reflects this polarity: whereas Willy and Happy willfully and happily delude themlves, Biff bristles stiffly at lf-deception. Biff’s discovery that Willy has a mistress strips him of his faith in Willy and Willy’s ambitions for him. Conquently, Willy es Biff as an underachiever, while Biff es him lf as trapped in Willy’s grandio fantasies. After his epiphany in Bill Oliver’s office, Biff determines to break through the lies surrounding the Loman family in order to come to realistic terms with his own life. Intent on revealing the simple and humbl e truth behind Willy’s fantasy, Biff longs for the territory (the symbolically free West) obscured by his father’s blind faith in a skewed, materialist version of th
e American Dream. Biff’s identity crisis is a function of his and his father’s disillusionm ent, which, in order to reclaim his identity, he must expo.
Happy Loman
Happy shares none of the poetry that erupts from Biff and that is buried in Willy—he is the stunted incarnation of Willy’s worst traits and the embodiment of the lie of the happy Ame rican Dream. As such, Happy is a difficult character with whom to empathize. He is one-dimensional and static throughout the play. His empty vow to avenge Willy’s death by finally “beat[ing] this racket” provides evidence of his critical condition: for Hap py, who has lived in the shadow of the inflated expectations of his brother, there is no escape from the Dream’s indoctrinated lies. Happy’s diad condition is irreparable—he lacks even the tiniest spark of lf-knowledge or capacity for lf-analysis. He does share Willy’s capacity for lf-delusion, trumpeting himlf as the assistant buyer at his store, when, in reality, he is only an assistant to the assistant buyer. He does not posss a hint of the latent thirst for knowledge that proves Biff’s sal vation. Happy is a doomed, utterly duped figure, destined to be swallowed up by the force of blind ambition that fuels his insatiable x drive.
Linda Loman and Charley
Linda and Charley rve as forces of reason throughout the play. Linda is probably the most enigmatic and complex character in Death of a Salesman, or even in all of Miller’s work. Linda views freedom as an escape from debt, the reward of total ownership of the material goods that symbolize success and stability. Willy’s prolonged obssion with the American Dream ems, over the long years of his marriage, to have left Linda internally conflicted. Nevertheless, Linda, by far the toughest, most realistic, and most levelheaded character in the play, appears to have kept her emotional life intact. As such, she reprents the emotional core of the drama.
If Linda is a sort of emotional prophet, overcome by the inevitable end that she forees with startling clarity, then Charley functions as a sort of poetic prophet or sage. Miller portrays Charley as ambiguously gendered or effeminate, much like Tiresias, the mythological er in Sophocles’ Oedipus plays. Whereas Linda’s lucid diagnosis of Willy’s rapid decline is made possible by her emotional sanity, Charley’s prognosis of the situation is logi cal, grounded firmly in practical
reasoned analysis. He recognizes Willy’s financial failure, and the job offer that he extends to Willy constitutes a commonn solution. Though he is not terribly fond of Willy, Charley understands his plight and shields him from blame.
Themes, Motifs & Symbols
Themes
Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a literary work.
The American Dream
Willy believes wholeheartedly in what he considers the promi of the American Dream—that a “well liked” and “personally attractive” man in business will indubitably and dervedly acquire the material comforts offered by modern American life. Oddly, his fixation with the superficial qualities of attractiveness and likeability is at odds with a more gritty, more rewarding understanding of the American Dream that identifies hard work without complaint as the key to success. Willy’s interpretation of likeability is superficial—he childishly dislikes Bernard becau he considers Bernard a nerd. Willy’s blind faith in his stunted version of the American Dream leads to his rapid psychological decline when he is unable to accept the disparity between the Dream and his own life.
Abandonment
Willy’s life charts a cour from one abandonment to the next, leaving him in g reater despair each time. Willy’s father leaves him and Ben when Willy is very young, leaving Willy neither a tangible (mo
ney) nor an intangible (history) legacy. Ben eventually departs for Alaska, leaving Willy to lo himlf in a warped vision of the American Dream. Likely a result of the early experiences, Willy develops a fear of abandonment, which makes him want his family to conform to the American Dream. His efforts to rai perfect sons, however, reflect his inability to understand reality. The young Biff, whom Willy considers the embodiment of promi, drops Willy and Willy’s zealous ambitions for him when he finds out about Willy’s adultery. Biff’s ongoing inability to succeed in business furthers his estrangement from Willy. When, at Frank’s Ch op Hou, Willy finally believes that Biff is on the cusp of greatness, Biff shatters Willy’s illusions and, along with Happy, abandons the deluded, babbling Willy in the washroom.
Betrayal
Willy’s primary obssion throughout the play is what he considers to be Biff’s betrayal of his ambitions for him. Willy believes that he has every right to expect Biff to fulfill the promi inherent in him. When Biff walks out on Willy’s ambitions for him, Willy takes this rejection as a personal affront (he associates it with “insult” and “spite”). Willy, after all, is a salesman, and Biff’s ego-crushing rebuff ultimately reflects Willy’s inability to ll him on the American Dream—the product in which Willy himlf believes most faithfully. Willy assumes that Biff’s b etrayal stems from Biff’s discovery of Willy
’s affair with The Woman—a betrayal of Linda’s love. Whereas Willy feels that Biff has betrayed him, Biff feels that Willy, a “phony little fake,” has betrayed him with his unending stream of ego-stroking lies.
荷兰鼠
Motifs
怡的成语Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major themes.
Mythic Figures
Willy’s tendency to mythologize people contributes to his deluded understanding of the world. He speaks of Dave Singleman as a legend and imagines that his death must have been beautifully
noble. Willy compares Biff and Happy to the mythic Greek figures Adonis and Hercules becau he believes that his sons are pinnacles of “personal attractiveness” and power through “well liked”-ness; to him, they em the very incarnation of the American Dream.
Willy’s mythologizing proves quite nearsighted, however. Willy fails to realize the hopelessness of Singleman’s lonely, on-the-job, on-the-road death. Trying to achieve what he considers to be Single
man’s heroic status, Willy commits himlf to a pathetic death and meaningless legacy (even if Willy’s life insurance policy ends up paying off, Biff wants nothing to do with Willy’s ambition for him). Similarly, neither Biff nor Happy ends up leading an ideal, godlike life; while Happy does believe in the American Dream, it ems likely that he will end up no better off than the decidedly ungodlike Willy.
The American West, Alaska, and the African Jungle
The regions reprent the potential of instinct to Biff and Willy. Willy’s father found success in Alaska and his brother, Ben, became rich in Africa; the exotic locales, especially when compared to Willy’s banal Brooklyn neighborhood, crystallize how Willy’s obssion with t he commercial world of the city has trapped him in an unpleasant reality. Whereas Alaska and the African jungle symbolize Willy’s failure, the American West, on the other hand, symbolizes Biff’s potential. Biff realizes that he has been content only when working on farms, out in the open. His westward escape from both Willy’s delusions and the commercial world of the eastern United States suggests a nineteenth-century pioneer mentality—Biff, unlike Willy, recognizes the importance of the individual.
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors ud to reprent abstract ideas or concepts. Seeds
Seeds reprent for Willy the opportunity to prove the worth of his labor, both as a salesman and a father. His desperate, nocturnal attempt to grow vegetables signifies his shame about barely being able to put food on the table and having nothing to leave his children when he pass. Willy feels that he has worked hard but fears that he will not be able to help his offspring any more than his own abando ning father helped him. The eds also symbolize Willy’s n of failure with Biff. Despite the American Dream’s formula for success, which Willy considers infallible, Willy’s efforts to cultivate and nurture Biff went awry. Realizing that his all-American football star has turned into a lazy bum, Willy takes Biff’s failure and lack of ambition as a reflection of his abilities as a father.
Diamonds
To Willy, diamonds reprent tangible wealth and, hence, both validation of one’s labor (and life) and the ab ility to pass material goods on to one’s offspring, two things that Willy desperately craves. Correlatively, diamonds, the discovery of which made Ben a fortune, symbolize Willy’s failure as a salesman. Despite Willy’s belief in the American Dream, a belie f unwavering to the extent that he pa
sd up the opportunity to go with Ben to Alaska, the Dream’s promi of financial curity has eluded Willy. At the end of the play, Ben encourages Willy to enter the “jungle” finally and retrieve this elusive diamond—that is, to kill himlf for insurance money in order to make his life meaningful.
Linda’s and The Woman’s Stockings
花钱找工作Willy’s strange obssion with the condition of Linda’s stockings foreshadows his later flashback to Biff’s discovery of him and The Woman in their Boston hotel room. The teenage Biff accus
家长会内容
Willy of giving away Linda’s stockings to The Woman. Stockings assume a metaphorical weight as the symbol of betrayal and xual infidelity. New stockings are important for both Willy’s pride in being fi nancially successful and thus able to provide for his family and for Willy’s ability to ea his guilt about, and suppress the memory of, his betrayal of Linda and Biff.
The Rubber Ho
The rubber ho is a stage prop that reminds the audience of Willy’s d esperate attempts at suicide. He has apparently attempted to kill himlf by inhaling gas, which is, ironically, the very substance esntial to one of the most basic elements with which he must equip his home for his family’s healt
h and comfort—heat. Literal death by inhaling gas parallels the metaphorical death that Willy feels in his struggle to afford such a basic necessity.
Act 2
Summary
When Willy awakes the next morning, Biff and Happy have already left, Biff to e Bill Oliver and Happy to mull over the “Florida idea” and go to work. Willy, in high spirits with the prospect of the “Florida idea,” mentions that he would like to get some eds and plant a small garden in the yard. Linda, plead with her husband’s hopeful mood, points out that there is not enough sun. Willy replies that they will have to get a hou in the country. Linda reminds Willy to ask his boss, Howard, for a non-traveling job as well as an advance to pay the insurance premium. They have one last payment on both the refrigerator and the hou, and they have just finished paying for the car. Linda informs Willy that Biff and Happy want to take him to dinner at Frank’s Chop Hou at six o’clock. As Willy departs, moved and excited by his sons’ dinner invitation, he notices a stocking that Linda is mending and, guilt-ridden with the latent memory of his adultery with The Woman, admonishes her to throw the stocking away.
属猪人的命运家务劳动日记
Willy timidly enters Howard’s office. Howard is playing with a wire recorder he has just purchad for dictation. He plays the recorded voices of his family: his cloyingly enthusiastic children (a whistling daughter and a son who recites the state capitals in alphabetical order) and his shy wife. As Willy tries to express admiration, Howard repeatedly shushes him. Willy asks for a non-traveling job at $65 a week. Howard replies that there is no opening available. He looks for his lighter. Willy finds it and hands it to him, unconsciously ignoring, in his nervous and pathetically humble distraction, his own advice never to handle or tend to objects in a superior’s office, since that is the responsibility of “office boys.” Willy keeps lowering his salary request, explaining his financial situation in unusually candid detail, but Howard remains resistant. Howard keeps calling him “kid” and assumes a condescending tone despite his younger age and Willy’s reminders that he helped Howard’s father name him.
I realized that lling was the greatest career a man could want.
(See Important Quotations Explained)
Desperate, Willy tries to relate an anecdote about Dave Singleman, an eighty-four-year-old salesman who phoned his buyers and made his sales without ever leaving his hotel room. After he di
ed the noble “death of a salesman” that eludes Willy, hundreds of salesmen and buyers at tended his funeral. Willy reveals that his acquaintance with this venerable paragon of salesmanship convinced him to become a salesman himlf rather than join his brother, Ben, on his newly purchad plot of timberland in Alaska. Singleman’s dignified suc cess and graceful, respected position as an older man deluded Willy into believing that “lling was the greatest career a man could want” becau of its limitless potential and its honorable nature. Willy laments the loss of