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Willy Lowman And The American Dream

Decent Essays

The Theme of the American Dream in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman “In the greatest country in the world a young man with such—personal attractiveness, gets lost.” Willy Lowman, the protagonist in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman, expresses such an expectation as he wholeheartedly upholds the undertaking of the American Dream. As his two sons, Biff and Happy, repeatedly fail to fulfill their potential successes, Willy never abandons hope and copes with the letdowns and disappointments by having routine fantasies. However, while his daydreams become more and more prominent, they begin to affect his ability to function, which in turn leads to a downward spiral in his career as well as his relationships. Willy’s loving and supportive wife, Linda, fuels his imaginations in hopes of nurturing him back to his usual self. Nevertheless, due to Willy’s twisted perception on how to achieve success and his tendency to dream, Willy never actually acquires his “promised” fame and fortune, which drives him to commit suicide at the end of the play. Through Arthur Miller’s utilization of symbols, his depiction of Willy’s fantasies, and his employment of Willy’s opinions regarding success, the audience can detect the reasons as to why the Lowmans were unable to achieve the American Dream. Arthur Miller exercises multiple symbols throughout his play to signify Willy Lowman’s idealistic visions of prosperity. Willy has a fixation with growing crops in his backyard even though he is

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