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Death of a Salesman (Penguin Plays)

Death of a Salesman (Penguin Plays)
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Manufacturer: Penguin (Non-Classics)
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Death of a Salesman (Penguin Plays) Features

ISBN13: 9780140481341
Condition: NEW
Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
 

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Additional Death of a Salesman (Penguin Plays) Information

The tragedy of a typical American--a salesman who at the age of sixty-three is faced with what he cannot face; defeat and disillusionment.

 

What Customers Say About Death of a Salesman (Penguin Plays):

she really loves her husband and ready to sacrifice for him. it reflect the reality after World War 2 and Cold War.My favorite character is Linda.

If you need something to read to occupy your time, this book is a good read but it's not the best. Being an English major, this book was not one of my favorite works, but I wouldn't skimp on reading it either. Arthur Miller is a brilliant playwright/author but for some reason it just didn't grasp me like other works have in the past and I've read hundreds of books.

The only upside is that it's easy to understand and a quick read. The characters have very little physical action, no humor, and no eccentricity. But clearly better seen than read. Although most readers will develop an emotional attachment to the downtrodden family, the language is just too dry and dull. In short, the scenes are boring.

He takes weekly handouts from a relative to feed his family. Willy's sales pitch and to-be-well-liked prescription for success is hopelessly misguided. The life of Willy's second son is summed up with excruciating irony when his mother tells him, "You're nothing but a philandering bum, my baby." Willy's wife is long-suffering, but she loves him, and demands that her son's respect that. He can't go on like this, and he doesn't. He has been passed by. Arthur Miller's brilliant play Death of a Salesman is compelling and pertinent to the point of being painful.

His son, who once showed great promise on the football field, is reduced to living at home and trying to make a living doing work not unlike Willy's, if he works at all. He searches pathetically for reasons why his family has not done better: his older son missed lost out on a good job because he whistled on an elevator.This is a man without anchorages to give him self-respect. If anything, it is more timely today than when it was when first performed in the late '40's. Promises of old have long been forgotten. A purposeful suicide, one that will provide his wife with a life insurance payoff, is all he's got left.The French sociologist Emile Durkheim might have described Willy's life as bereft of durable cultural standards, deregulated to the point of chaos, and devoid of opportunities for membership which would give his a sense of belonging without fearing he might be stabbed in the back at any time.The death of a salesman may speak even more clearly to us today because our world seems even more anomic and egoistic than Willy's. The protagonist, Willy Loman, is aging, damaged, and profoundly lost.

But Willy's world, if it ever existed in the form he imagined, is gone.

He tells Linda he is tired to death. He is having a breakdown. A salesman has dreams enough to infect his whole family. Willy Loman, salesman, carries two sample cases. Someone tells Willy he has always been so young, (so naive, in other words). Untypically, Willy is talking to himself. The play is good, strong, undated.

He is over sixty. (This is the set-up).Miller's play has much immediacy and much resonance in our own economic crisis. Linda believes Willy is trying to kill himself. Biff is finding himself at age thirty-four. Linda says, "Attention must be paid." And she says that he is exhausted.

Linda is his wife, Biff and Happy are his sons. He couldn't get past Yonkers because he almost hit a kid. As parents often do, Willy recalls a time when the boys were younger. He lives in New York but is the New England man. Happy takes bribes, ruins girls, and Biff has had a number of jobs.

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