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The American Dream

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In Arthur Millers Death of a Salesman, the theme of the American dream is used to define how Family and the pursuit of Wealth can’t coexist together at the same time. An individual must decide which path they want to pursue, or at the very least which one is of greater importance then the other. It is this struggle to form both a tight-knit family unit while pursuing one’s desire to, not only, be financially stable but also well off as well within Miller’s character Willy Lowman.
In the beginning of the play, “An air of the dream clings to the place, a dream rising out of reality” (11). This dream of Willy Lowman is to exceed past the normal everyday person and to become someone who is both renowned and wealthy. Of course he loves his family, but the struggle to keep both at the same time destroys him. He is constantly worrying about how to fix his relationship with Biff, and prove to him that he is a good father. He wants to know how to be successful, and is seen constantly asking Ben for the answers, yet, as the play develops, this “incantatory formula,” as Jacobson calls it, is never given to Willy (251). And in the end Willy never fully learns how to be a success. This is a stark contrast to other minor characters within the play, which understand how society works and have become a success.
Charley, the Lowman’s neighbour, doesn’t care about becoming wealthy. He is simply a content man, and when asked how he managed to make ends meet he simply replies that: “My

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