Death of a Salesman American Dream Essay

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    Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman offers a distinct commentary on the American Dream, best explored in the death of its protagonist, Willy Loman. Almost immediately before Willy and his wife Laura are to make their final payment on their twenty-five year mortgage and take full ownership of their house, Willy, crazed and desperate, commits suicide. As his family mourns and praises him, Willy’s eldest son, Biff, bemoans, “He had the wrong dreams. All, all, wrong…He never knew who he was” (Miller

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    times than they count, they miss the journey in between. "The American Dream" is the root of American culture through some ideas at the root of it seem incorrect. The play Death of a Salesman represents a detailed philosophy about morals, visions, goals, and achievement in our customer-oriented society. The play portrays the American dream that society tends to strive for even in the early 1900s (the play set in the 1940s). The dream of being a successful professional person and has the perfect life

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    American Dream is the ideal of people to have an equal opportunity to achieve success and through hard work. The American dream is as old as America itself: the country has often been seen as an empty frontier to be explored and conquered. People all have their own American dream. In Death of a Salesman, Arthur Miller expresses the loss of the American Dream through the life of disappointment. Willy who is a salesman believes that having an American Dream can make him successful like others. Willy

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    We created a shrine based on the play Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, specifically around Willy’s idea of what the American Dream is. Willy belived that the American Dream being successful by whatever means necessary. All Willy’s life he believed that being “well liked” was the key to being successful, and he passed those beliefs onto his kids (20). He thought that being well liked will open up doors in busness well as as in his social life. Being well liked creates opportunities, that is why

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    Arthur Miller’s Death of A Salesman shows us the necessity to keep the idea and hope of the American Dream alive. Throughout the play, the character Willy shows us what happens when the American Dream is at risk. When he starts to lose his ability to continue to live this dream it puts him in a place of confusion because of all the years and time he has put in to live the dream that people say he should. One distinct way Miller shows how people stand by the notion of the American Dream. Miller describes

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    the American Dream has long been questioned for the frequent conception of success in the exclusively economic terms of the production of an affluent lifestyle. The Dream has been criticized equally persistently for the exclusivity of its promises in practice, which have historically been limited to white, male, middle/upper class social actors, whose “will” and “hard work” are attributed individualistically to personal virtue in isolation from social position. Arthur Miller used the American Dream

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    The play Death of a Salesman greatly portrays a specific ideology in regards to values, dreams, goals, and success in our consumer-driven society. It helps showcase the American dream that society tends to strive for even in the early 1900’s (the play is set in the 1940’s). That dream of being a successful business person or vendor. As well as the theory that image and physical attributes are most important to gaining fruition. Willy Loman plays a man in his sixties who has strived for this American

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    The American Dream is the way of life that grants an absolute guaranteed life of wealth. Its concept on its own describes the American hopefuls to achieve this status. As such a phenomenon that is developed in the States, it sadly grants a lot of loop holes despite the positive prowess its meaning is about. The possibilities are supposedly endless with the land of opportunity, but such drastic measures are used to reach that goal as the ideal idea of the American Dream is vastly actually impossible

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    The American Dream is a form of life all Americans in the contemporary world want today. They all hope for an enjoyable life with the basic necessities in a typical American Dream like buying a house, owning a car, having a job of your dreams or having a family. Although many envisioned the American Dream as being the greatest thing for your life, the book "Death of a Salesman" tells things otherwise. In the story, the American Dream was being emphasized like a jail cell. The story proves living

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    Arthur Miller’s Death of Salesman tells the tale of Willy Loman, American salesman and father of two sons who is desperately trying to achieve the American Dream for his family. When the play was published in 1949, just after the end of World War II and at the dawn of one of the most prosperous decades in American history, things were looking very optimistic for America. The United States had emerged as an economic superpower in which all of its citizens had the opportunity to become rich and build

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