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The Death of a Salesman. Requiem and Conclusion. Outline. Discussion Questions The Requiem: Different Views of Willy Loman The Survivors Arthur Miller ’ s “ Tragedy and the Common Man” Willy ’ s “ tragedy ” : The Work of the Environment His Character Different Kinds of Success
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The Death of a Salesman Requiem and Conclusion
Outline • Discussion Questions • The Requiem: • Different Views of Willy Loman • The Survivors • Arthur Miller’s “Tragedy and the Common Man” • Willy’s “tragedy”: • The Work of the Environment • His Character • Different Kinds of Success • Critique of The American Dream • The Play as an Example of Expressionism • Final Exam, Spring 2015 & Course Evaluations
Discussion Questions • G4: What do you think are the functions of Requiem? How is Willy’s death responded to by all the different characters? • G8: Is Willy Loman a tragic hero who acts and wins our esteem? Or is he a victim? A victim of his own character or of a system of exploitation and ruthless competition? • G6: How about the other Loman characters with their Dreams? • G7: Why is this play an example of Expressionism? (consider it’s stage and stage directions) • G9: The play as a critique of the American Dream? • G2: A News Story or Salesman’s Sample Case • G3: Hot Seats • G5/G1/G10: The Road Not/Better Taken
More Creative Questions: (1) “The Road Not Taken” (2)Salesman’s Sample Case (3) A News Story (4) Happy, Biff or Linda, taking the hot seat
More Creative Questions: (1) “The Road Not Taken” -- Persuade Willy or Biff to make a different choice at one of the character’s various turning points, while showing how you understand him in his original choice.
Willy: w/o Self-Knowledge & Self-Acceptancew/ fatherly love & pride
Biff w/ talents in sports, interests in farm work, love for his father & [towards the end] self-knowledgew/o abilities to resolve conflicts in his life, w/ his father, or how to succeed in biz
More Creative Questions: (2) Sample Cases Myth & Charisma What would you carry in your case if you were a salesman in 1940’s ortoday? How would you sell them, supporting the myth or revealing their contradictions? Possible items: 1950’s – silk stockings (femininity), home appliance (for nuclear family); Today: cosmetics, cell phones; suitcase turned into a blog, or a hand-held ad (for real estate) Image source
Possible Issues Consumerism, Sweet Home Dream in the 50’s Consumerism, Economic Inequality & Competitive Capitalist System today (ref)
More Creative Questions: (3) Headline News After the death of Willy, you, a journalist, interview his boss, customers and family and write a news story about why he died. News representation --indifferent, intrusively sentimental, analytical, or elegiac?
More Creative Questions: (4) Hot Seat You take the role of either Linda, Biff, or Happy, stay in the character and get quizzed by your classmates.
Requiem –formal, somber, a-temporal • Stage Direction: (the only transition from car crash to Requiem) • Music: a frenzy of sound A single cello string a dead march; • Lighting: leaves and daylight. • Wall-line – crossed • Flowers put “at the limit of the apron (a space for the past and Willy’s imagination). • Characters: put on mourning dresses (no resistance; no surprise a sense of fatality) • Requiem: a mass at which people honor and pray for a dead person Willy [the salesman] Seen from Different Perspectives //self-revelation in the 2 Acts
Willy and the Survivors • Happy and Biff: Who do you agree with more? • criticisms= reveal their own short-coming; • confirm, idealize the part of Willy they themselves identify with. • Biff– • realistic: “he had the wrong dreams”; “the man didn't know who he was“ • “Forgetting that the stoop was constructed from stolen materials, Biff muses fondly, ‘there's more of him in that front stoop than in all the sales he ever made’“ (Stanton 152) • Happy – • defiant and angry, “had no right to do it. …We would’ve helped him.” empty promise • “He had a good dream.” Happy promises to maintain Willy's dream and his fight. • Happy is the last one to leave the stage with the flute music and images of apartment buildings.
Willy and the Survivors (3) • Charley--generous? Or over-sentimental? • “It was a nice funeral” • "Nobody dast blame this man. [. . .] And for a salesman, there is no rock bottom to the life. He don’t put a bolt to a nut, he don’t tell you the law or give you medicine. He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine. And when they start not smiling back – that’s an earthquake. Nobody dast blame this man. A salesman is got to dream, boy. It comes with the territory.”(1264) Charley: 1) self-contradictory, both realistic about, and forgiving and generous to Willy. 2) Reveals the lack of foundation or substance to Willy’s dream and capitalism as a whole. (more later)
Willy and the Survivors (3) Linda – • “Why didn’t anybody come?” • ”I can’t understand it.” • disagrees; cannot understand Willy’s need of self-dignity. • “I can’t cry.” • disapproves of him; numbed after the first shock. • “And there’ll be nobody home. We're free and clear," she says to Willy, sobbingly. • “free”-- from mortgage & pressure; from family members & duties?
Arthur Miller’s “Tragedy and the Common Man” • Tragedy depicts the downfall of a noble hero or heroine, usually through some combination of hubris (pride), fate, and the will of the gods. • Ideal vs. Limitations: The tragic hero's powerful wish to achieve some goal inevitably encounters limits, usually those of human frailty (flaws in reason, hubris, society), the gods (through oracles, prophets, fate), or nature. Aristotle says that the tragic hero should have a flaw and/or make some mistake (hamartia). • Ending: The hero need not die at the end, but he / she must undergo a change in fortune. In addition, the tragic hero may achieve some revelation or recognition about human fate, destiny, and the will of the gods. Aristotle quite nicely terms this sort of recognition "a change from ignorance to awareness of a bond of love or hate." (source) • Audience’s response: pity and fear; catharsis
Arthur Miller’s “Tragedy and the Common Man” • Background: tragedy = Greek tragedy • There are few tragedies nowadays due to • the paucity of heroes among us. • the skepticism of science • the common man is as apt a subject for tragedy in its highest sense as kings were. • Reasons: 1) In the light of modern psychiatry, the situations of Oedipus and Orestes can be applied to everyone in similar emotional situations. 2) The mental processes of kings shared by the lowly. 3) tragedy of the highbred character is remote from common people. See also the Miller Interview excerpt on p. 1736 (source)
Miller’s views of Modern Tragegy of the common man • Definition: “tragic feeling is evoked in us when we are in the presence of a character who is ready to lay down his life, if need be, to secure one thing--his sense of personal dignity. [. . .] the underlying struggle is that of the individual attempting to gain his ‘rightful’ position in his society.” • The flaw: his inherent unwillingness to remain passive in the face of what he conceives to be a challenge to his dignity, his image of his rightful status. • Terror –from this total examination of the "unchangeable" environment
Miller’s views of Modern Tragegy of the common man (2) • In the tragic view the need of man to wholly realize himself is the only fixed star, and whatever it is that hedges his nature and lowers it is ripe for attack and examination. • Wrong concept of tragedy it implies more optimism (than comedy) • The pathetic: those who are not able to grapple with the superior force • Tragedy requires a fine balance between what is possible and what is impossible. • Optimism: perfectibility of man
DS as a Modern Tragedy about Willy’s struggle between – his circumstances & his personality among different concepts of Success, while keeping hope in Linda and Biff –enabling them to be resilient and improving
The circumstances • Willy's family background • The lack of a father who is around. • Three models: Father Loman, Ben and Dave Singleman • Ben’s aggresive opportunism • Dave Singleman – a loner of the past • American Capitalist/Industrial society and the American Dream • Willy outdated. Yet he tries hard to maintain his sense of dignity.
Personality • Blind: Cannot face his own and his son shortcomings, nor their conflicts; • False belief in appearance, social connections and the American dream; • Dignified: cannot “walk away,“ continues to fight for his position; cannot bend himself to work for Charley. • A loving father reconciles with Biff when he finds that Biff loves him.
Kinds of Success (1) • In the business world--possessions: • Charley’s – money in the pocket; growing up/becoming a man or adult; • Bernard’s –passing the test ( education); lawyer; playing tennis; one friend with a tennis court at home; • Howard – owning a company, with a variety of playthings (camera, handsaw, a recorder for only 150 dollars, children and wife recorded). • Ben– frontier expansionism; colonial exploitation of others go to far-away places [e.g. the West, Alaska, Africa] for gold and diamonds
Kinds of Success (2) • Willy’s – both success in the biz world and on the field • The physical: • Winning the football game; • building things [e.g. what Willy does to his house--as Biff describes it in the Requiem] 2. Business world • well-liked • Earning money to pay for the mortgage 3. Pride and Idealism Mythic dimension: Biff as Adonis, Hercules 4. Family togetherness (in the city and out in the countryside).
Critique of the American Dream • Americans dream of success • which “should be” easy and quick “as long as” you work hard • Ben (age 17-21) – “seemingly” easy and quick success • Materialism + Idealism –money + the world of Nature • Willy and Biff – their dreams of working on a ranch and planting. • Male aggression & expansionism • Women as target of possession, access to power and revenge (e.g. Willy and Happy) • wives – supportive but without subjectivity
Expressionism • an artistic style in which the artist attempts to depict not objective reality but rather the subjective emotions and responses that objects and events arouse in him. • Methods: through distortion, exaggeration, primitivism, and fantasy and through the vivid, jarring, violent, or dynamic application of formal elements (e.g. stage directions). • one of the main currents of art in the later 19th and the 20th centuries, and its qualities of highly subjective, personal, spontaneous self-expression are typical of a wide range of modern artists and art movements.(source)
Symbols re. Willy’s Dream: A Review • Willy’s house vs. apartment buildings, etc. [e.g. the first stage direction] • Properties and Possessions: • Football and the sneakers with U. of V on them. • the house and the mortgage, Things {Fridge, car, vacuum cleaner ] that are broken/falling apart • Linda's stockings • Tennis • of power and status: wire recorder and pen • Nature and The West– • Seeds/plants/trees; light of green leaves • Working with tools/one's hands [e.g. Willy's argument with Charley towards the end of Act I: :A man who can't handle tools is not a man." "hammer a nail"] • Roads -- [being on the road] Cars/boats/trains: [e.g. Willy's Red Chevvy; Willy compared to "alittle boat looking for a harbor" by Linda; Ben's taking the train.]
Symbols & Emotional Changes –in stage directions • flute [Willy's father]– beginning of act 1, when Ben appears, • Willy’s theme • Other kinds of music--e.g. • jarring trumpet note (city), • Boys’ theme • Ben's theme; • the end of act II (suicide by car crash) • End of Requiem—a noble and elegiac ending. • “Flashbacks” – Willy’s search for comfort, confirmation and his facing reality
Final Exam • 2 Text-Analysis Q’s (each 20%) • 2 Essay Questions • 1. which workstation did you learn the most from and what have you learned? (10%) • 2. choose a theme to compare two poems, in explaining the differences and similarities, you should consider the historical background, or that of the poets’. (25%) • 3. on The Death of a Salesman (25%)
Work Cited • Stanton, Kay. “Women and the American Dream of Death of a Salesman.” Critical Insights: Death of a Salesman. Ed. Brenda Murphy. Salem P: 120-60.