Wednesday, July 17, 2019
Willy Loman
The the Statesn vision is the estimation that with gravely scat and pers constantlyance, anyone can succeed in America, the land of opportunity. However, as eon went by, the creative thinker of the American Dream came to mean working to buy clobber possessions, and no matter how long(p) someone works, in that location is always more than to buy. As people throw to raise upher to achieve the American Dream, companies d protestsize and fire people who possess given their departs to that club. Capitalism in America causes a truly few people to gain riches while the rest of society average continues to struggle.The unforgettable Willy Loman and his family demonstrate the dangers and d take inright destructive forces of capitalism. Willy Loman has simply fantastic expectations of his own heart and his family members. He does non demo his own flaws and just cannot seem to get ahead. Willy Loman shows the dangers of get besides wrapped up in the very values of capit alism such as the appraisal that money equals character and material possessions defines self-worth.As Willy continues to be unsuccessful, he feels more and more inadequate and depressed. He is courted by the grand supposition of the American Dream without understanding that it is almost unattainable for many. He suffers from this strategy as well as his own inability to change the dream or to cope with the impractical nature of the dream. Capitalism kills his American Dream.Willy raises his children by transferring his own unrealistic version of the dream to them in incalculable ways. Willys focus in raising his children is that they be twain attractive and best- sell(predicate). By raising his children this way, they neer learn any skills that volition sustain them in life. In event, they learn re every get going(predicate)y the opposite of capitalism in making the effort to get ahead. paper bag, who thinks he is above it all because he is so popular and well- standard izedd that he doesnt devote any fourth dimension to schoolwork and ends up flunking high school math. He doesnt make it up in summer school so he cannot go to college. He actually ends up stealing from his boss, and is basically floundering in the beingness. He, analogous his father, always has grandiose fancys nearly success. Happy, on the other hand, turns out another way. Happy be guileves that top O screwr (the boss Biff stole from) entrust change them money for one of their half-baked plans about selling sporting goods. He is completely unrealistic and has no ambition. Happy is well- care, especially by women, but fades all his measure trying to score.No effort is wedded to actually getting a traffic or being self-sufficient. Because Willy is so foc employ on the idea that his children will achieve the American Dream, he teaches them imposing values. When Biff steals a football, Willy praises him. When Biff flunks math, he ignores the fact that Biff cheated. He p umps up their self-esteem so much that they cannot take up down jobs. They cannot seem to turn to taking orders from anyone. And Willy cannot seem to avoid making these wrong promises to them.For example as he tells his boys, the man who makes an expression in the business world, the man who creates a person-to-person interest, is the man who gets ahead. Be liked and you will never want. You take me, for instance. I never study to dwell in line to see a buyer. Willy Loman is here Thats all they halt to k nowadays and I go right through. ( miller 33) However, he is a gross salesman for the resembling company who lets him go without a second thought, as he becomes less useful to them. Willy is not preparing his children for a world of competitive corporate downsizing and such.He pumps his children up for life but goes way too far in avoiding the truth. When Biff talks about working for Bill Oliver, he says, How the hell did I ever get the idea I was a salesman there? I eve n believed myself that Id been a salesman for him And consequently he gave me one encounter and I realized what a ridiculous lie my whole life had been Weve been talking in a dream for fifteen years.I was a rapture clerk (Miller 104). In this quote Biff summarizes the idea that Willy has filled them both full of hot air, to the organize that they cannot even live in the real world. Biff cannot even admit that he was only a lowly clerk and so he ends up getting angry and stealing from his own boss. Willy has not allowed the boys to truly see reality.Another capitalistic idea presented is that everyone mustiness work and work in this world to provide for their families, to keep them in the newest things. However, people never actually get to see the benefits of all their hard work. As a society, most families ar in debt for everything they own, and they never get to see the end crossway of that. As Willy says, Figure it out. Work a aliveness to brook mutilate a house. You finally own it, and theres nobody left to live in it (Miller 15).By the time Willy works ample years in his life to pay off the house and the stuff in it, the kids are vainglorious and he is on the verge of retirement. And as he says, I gotta be at it ten, twelve hours a day (Miller 37). He works so hard to provide for his family but never actually gets to spend time with them because he is always working to pay for all that stuff. In a capitalistic world, things are made to be replaced and to keep their owners give on them. Once in my life I would like to own something outright before it is humbled. I just finished paying for the car and its on its last leg (Miller 36).The same idea is expressed over again by Willy in talking with Linda about the icebox. They are discussing the expensive General Electric which functions well versus the cheaper battle of Hastings model that they bought. Whoever heard of a Hastings icebox? Once in my life I would like to own something outrigh t before its broken Im always in a race with the junkyard I just finished paying for the care and its on its last legs. The refrigerator consumes belts like a goddam maniac.They time those things. They time them so when you finally paid for them, theyre used up (Miller 73). Like the products that are all most him, Willy is also used up himself, and his company will prove this by letting him go aft(prenominal) his dedication all these years.The idea that everyone must work really hard and advance their way up the ladder in order to make a good living is also presented. To suffer fifty dollar bill weeks of the year for the sake of a two-week vacation, when all you really desire is to be outdoors, with your shirt off. And always to have to get ahead of the next fella. And stillthats how you build a future (Miller 22).Ben and Charley are both presented as foils to this idea, and Willy is depressed that he does not live the lifestyle of either of these men, but he lost the boat so to speak. These men both large-hearted of luck into things as is often the case in a capitalistic society. Many times, it makes no diversion how hard one works or how liked he is or anything else it is about being in the right place at the right time. mass can be discarded in this capitalistic world when they no longer serve their purpose. Willy is open fire after devoting his life to the company with the horrible designation of capitalism, business is business.(Miller 80). Willy has given his adult life to sales for this company, and when he is no longer useful to them, he is fired. You cant eat the orange and throw the peel outside a man is not a set up of music of fruit (Miller 82)The Wagner Company has sucked the life out of him and then fired him, discarding him like a useless piece of orange rind. I dont say hes a great man. Willie Loman never made a lot of money. His pick up was never in the paper. Hes not the finest character that ever lived. But hes a human being, and a flagitious thing is happening to him. So attention must be paid. Hes not to be allowed to fall in his grave like an old dog. Attention, attention must finally be paid to such a person (Miller 56).Linda is making a statement to America here about the way workers are hard-boiled in such a capitalistic society. When everyone wants to get ahead, humanity is lost. Willy is a person, and he deserves to be treated like one. He works for a company thirty-six years this March, opens up unheard-of territories to their trademark, and now in his old age they take his remuneration away (Miller 56).Humanity is lost. Workers should have pensions for devoting their lives to a company. As he says to Charley, you end up worth more dead than alive (Miller 76). His life insurance insurance left to his family will provide better for them than he ever could. This again, is the sadness of many corporate lives when they have reached the end of their usefulness according to the powers that be.Willy ev en has grandiose ideas about his own funeral and his importance in this put down world. Willy has given his life for the business, and feels that his funeral will be spectacular. both the people he sold to will be there. People from all over New England will attend because he was so well-liked but in reality, no one attendshis family and Charley.In all, Willy Loman was destroyed by the capitalistic society. Capitalism kept him working in a job to keep up with the Jones he was able to buy all the things that society sells to us with the idea that they are indispensable. He devotes his life to his job in sales, never spending much time with his family because he was always on the road. In the end, what does he have to show for it? Nothing. His boys are not reproductive and suffer from false illusions of their own. He kills himself so that his life insurance policy will provide for his family. Arthur Miller provides this play is a kind of indictment on the way the world is progressi ng today, particularly America. He provides Willy Loman as a sort of tragic hero who wants to hold to some of the old ideas but is continually trounce down by the new trends. Capitalism kills the American Dream.Works CitedMiller, Arthur, Death of a Salesman, Penguin Books, Middlesex England, 1949.
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