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Death of a Salesman Willie Loman

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Essay title: Death of a Salesman Willie Loman

Willy Loman is both a tragic figure and a pathetic figure. In a literary sense, he is a tragic figure. By definition a tragic figure is brought to ruin or suffers from extreme consequences of some tragic flaw or weakness of character. Willy suffers from his weaknesses of character and is brought to ruin by theses flaws. Willy made a poor choice-the adultery he fails to remember- that hurt his ability to function from that point on. His reality became intertwined with fantasy, and he became one big contradiction. He mixes his thoughts of the woman with thoughts of Linda, not realizing the difference. Willy’s fails to recognize the grief-stricken love available in his family, and the play offers this failure as the real tragedy. Even with this flaw of character, Willy makes the most fanatic sacrifice by committing suicide in his effort to leave an inheritance that will permit Biff to accomplish the American Dream. These are very contradictory aspects of his character, and seems that the first promotes the latter.

Willy Loman is a pathetic figure however. He does not achieve the self-realization or a sense of self like that of the typical tragic hero. Charley's speech about Willy being a victim of his own profession seems to be an attempt to support the heroic aspect of Willy's death and he states, “He’s a man way out there in the blue, riding on a smile and a shoeshine...a salesman is got to dream, boy." This seems to attribute Willy’s work to forces he had to content with, which killed him. On the contrary, Willy failed to realize he had other choices, and could have chosen other

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