Willy Loman In Death Of A Salesman

Words: 668
Pages: 3

There have been many times in literature when a character has done the inconceivable and doesn’t seem worthy of saving. The author occasionally bows to the audience's ideas of retribution; however, this leaves the question of if the aforementioned character could’ve been changed. Willy Loman is in this particular pool. He appears to have challenged every rule of proper conduct and with no one finding him out, until his son did. Since that day, hard feelings were harbored. This particular play has been written about numerous times, one critic saying, “Few things in Broadway history can have had so sensational a build-up: fewer still--which is far more wonderful--have been so breathlessly received when they arrived.” (Kolin) The idea that Willy Loman was redeemable in any way from Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, is ridiculous.

Throughout Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, Willy Loman appears to be an elderly man with some mental incapacities, due to age and stress and the likes. One reason why I find Willy Loman to be past the point of saving is the fact that he pushed his son to believe he was something he wasn’t. Biff Loman had the utmost respect for his dad, in a way to the point of worship. Willy was caught being unfaithful to his
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Willy Loman was a sad old man, who had everything in his youth but threw it away because he was lonely, as he put it. “They were seeing themselves, not because Willy is a salesman, but the situation in which he stood and to which he was reacting, and which was reacting against him, was probably the central situation of contemporary civilization.” (Griffin) He had a brilliant wife, and two sons that adored him, and a steady job that held his attention, but when it really came down to it, Willy couldn’t resist. What a sad way to