Author Arthur
Miller
Setting 1940s,
post-World War 2. The majority of the play takes place in the Loman’s house,
which is located in New York. Willy’s “flashbacks” occur somewhere in the
1920s.
Characters
-Willy Loman: salesman, married to Linda. Has as affair with
“the woman.” Willy is extremely proud and refuses to accept reality. Has
flashbacks throughout the play.
-Linda: Extremely loyal to Willy. Treats Willy like he’s her
baby, and blames Biff for what’s happening to him.
-Biff: Son of Willy and Linda. Has Jesus-like qualities, but
considered “expired” because he’s 34, not 33. Wants to be a farmer, but Willy
doesn’t approve.
-Happy: Son of Willy and Linda. Neither parent really cares
about him.
-Bernard: Charley’s son. Worked hard throughout school and
is now a successful lawyer.
-The Woman: woman that Willy has an affair with.
-Charley: Willy’s neighbor. Offers Willy a job, and helps
him out financially.
-Uncle Ben: Willy’s extremely successful brother. Dead.
Often appears in Willy’s flashbacks.
Plot
The play opens with Willy returning early from a business
trip. Linda comes in, worried that Willy smashed the car again. Willy and Linda
talk about Biff, and Willy makes it clear that he thinks Biff should be in
business (not farming). Meanwhile, Happy and Biff are conversing in their own
room. They talk about sleeping with women, jobs, and their concerns for Willy.
Biff says he wants to buy a ranch and work on a farm. During this, Willy has
gone down to the kitchen and is having a flashback. In this scene, Biff and
Happy both worship Willy. However, it is clear that Linda and Willy are in
debt, and that Willy is insecure with his abilities as a salesman. The scene
then switches to Willy in a hotel room with a woman. They kiss and he gives her
stockings. The scene switches back to the previous flashback, and Willy gets
angry with Linda for mending her stockings. Then he gets mad that Biff is
flunking math and “rough with the girls.” Willy comes back to the present, and
notices Happy is now in the kitchen. He’s dismissive of Happy’s attempts to
comfort him, and then Charley enters the scene. Charley and Willy play cards,
and Willy begins having a conversation with an imaginary Ben mainly about Ben’s
financial success. Charley and Willy fight, and Charley leaves. Willy flashes
back again and worries that he isn’t raising his boys correctly, and asks Ben
for his approval. He walks out of the house, past Linda, and continues talking
with himself. Biff and Happy come down and notice that something is wrong with
Willy. Linda admits that Willy has been trying to kill himself. Willy enters
the house, angry at Biff. Biff tells him that he’s going to see Bill Oliver
tomorrow to go into business, and Willy becomes excited. After some more talk,
everyone goes to bed.
The following day, Willy wakes up happy and drives into the
city to talk with his boss, Howard. He asks to be transferred to a job in the
city that wouldn’t require travelling. Howard refuses, and fires Willy. Willy
lapses back to the time when Ben offered him a job in Alaska. Meanwhile, he
walks to Charley’s work building, and runs into Bernard. He asks Bernard why
Biff threw his life away, and Bernard pins it back to when Biff visited Willy
in Boston. Charley comes out and gives Willy money for the week. Willy admits
that he’d be worth more dead than alive.
The scene switches then, with Happy and Biff waiting in a restaurant for
their dad. Biff says Oliver didn’t even remember him, and asks Happy to help
him tell Willy the truth. Willy arrives, but refuses to listen, so Biff lies
and says that he has lunch with Oliver tomorrow. Willy exits to the bathroom,
and Biff angrily leaves the restaurant. Happy follows with two women. Willy
flashes back to the hotel room and the woman. Biff walks in to talk about
failing math, and discovers that his father is having an affair. Willy comes
back to the present, and leaves the restaurant to go buy seeds. The scene
changes, and Happy and Biff enter the house. Linda yells at them for leaving
Willy in the restaurant. Biff goes out to talk with Willy. They fight, and Biff
ends up crying to Willy, begging him to let him go. Willy is thrilled to
realize that Biff “likes” him. Everyone goes to bed except Willy, who leaves in
his car and kills himself.
In the requiem, Biff, Linda, Charley, Happy and Bernard
attend Willy’s funeral. Biff reveals he’s leaving the city, but Happy decides
to stay in the city.
Style
-There is no narrative voice in this piece because it is a
play.
-Miller apparently has a negative point of view towards the
capitalistic system in the United States. I didn’t get this as much from
reading the play, so much as from reading the outside interviews.
-He doesn’t use imagery that often, which might be why this
play isn’t as impactful as, say, The
American Dream.
-There is definitely symbolism throughout the play. Two
prime examples of this are Willy and Linda. Because what Willy Loman sells is
never specified, Willy himself becomes this universal character that symbolizes
the plight of the working businessman. Linda comes to represent the “Madonna”
that men of the time period married.
Quotes
1.
“Attention, attention must be finally paid to
such a person” (Miller 56). –Linda, referring to Willy
v
Comment on how people in general have a duty to
one another. Also a comment on how business has discarded Willy (read:
capitalism/business=cold and bad)
2.
“He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on
a smile and a shoeshine” (Miller 138). –Charley, referring to Willy
v
This line simply intrigues me, because it
doesn’t sound like something Charley would say. It also makes Willy seem like
this helpless, lost ship. This furthers Biff’s point that Willy was always “lost”
in the sense that he never had the right dreams.
Theme
Capitalism=bad.
This is a central theme Miller explores in DOS. One main way
he develops this theme is through plot. Obviously, Willy lives in the USA, and
therefore lives in a capitalistic society. Throughout the novel, he tries to
appeal to peoples’ emotions and sentiments. However, he fails every time. For
example, when Willy pleads with Howard for his job, Willy tries to bring up how
he’s known Howard since he was a baby. However, this has zero effect on Howard.
The fact of the matter is that business is cold, impersonal and cut-throat. Miller
furthers this theme with the dialogue/character development of Linda. Linda
constantly comments on how attention must be paid to Willy, that society and
her sons need to help him because Willy is a human. Like Willy, she tries to get people in this capitalistic
society to realize that people have a duty to help each other. However, this is
lost on a lot of people. Happy and Biff don’t help much with supporting their
own father, Howard treats Willy like dirt, and business itself helps drive
Willy towards his death. All of this business and greed is a comment on
capitalism itself. Miller portrays this capitalistic society as completely void
of empathy.
Hi Haley!
ReplyDeleteYou really nailed the the theme of lost humanity in a cruel, merciless capitalistic world. I would elaborate on this by saying that Charley (a foil to Willy) finds success and happiness because he knows how to play the game, but understand that there is more to life. Willy spends his entire life trying to 'play the game' (sell things, and ultimately an image of himself) and he never really figures out how. This is his downfall.
Where do you think Ben plays into this world? Was he truly successful? Why?
I really thought your theme was perfect for this play like Emily. He thinks that old things like old emotional ties will work with capitalism, which was on the rise after WWII, but they don't really work with it. Ben understood how to use capitalism to his advantage, by depending on material things, and showed how he wasn't fair when he used his umbrella to fight Biff.
ReplyDeleteI like that other people commented on your analyses so I don't have to think as much B)
ReplyDeleteI really liked the first quote you used. I have a little text file with neat quotes and that's in it and I'm a dork. Possibly playing into the 'whole system is bad' vibe, the quote is in passive voice. Willy's situation is generalized to 'the whole system is ignoring every average joe' or something.
I don't know that the theme was that capitalism is necessarily bad, but more that the values of the existing system are bad. Traditional american capitalism valued hard work or whatever, and Bernard and I guess Charley find great success holding this value, while Willy is trying to get by on 'a smile and a shoeshine' and values opinions of other people. Intrinsic motivation vs extrinsic motivation, I guess.