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Saturday, November 12, 2016

Willy Loman - Tragic Hero in Death of a Salesman

Traditionally, tragical heroes much(prenominal) as Sophocles Oedipus and William Shakespeares Hamlet, were all of actually high favorable condition; either kings or nobles. Arthur Millers close of a Salesman however, gave us a new look at the term hero. It showed us that normal, routine race, such(prenominal) as Willy Loman, weed be tragic heroes as well. This is the modern tragic hero. Miller, by means of his play, enlightened us and broadened our aesthetical value and appreciation of tragic beauty.\nAccording to mainstream understanding, a tragic person, or as I like to call them, a tragic loser, fails at a multitude of things, as his ennoble suggests. In life, anyone has dreams and goals that he/she wishes to chance upon, such as buying a house, a luxury car, or a good job. still some dreams, like the Ameri clearful dream, cannot be achieved by everyone. unmatched person achieving it means that more others will not, because in that location is a fixed amount of wealthiness that can be distributed, and not everyone can get the uniform amount. The tragic person fails to seize his goals and therefore has a soul of unfulfilled, wasted life. He senses that hes losing retard of his life, and is manipulated by other people, by circumstances, and by fate. Also, he fails to know up to his self-image. This is why there are fewer lucky people than others, and so people admire them.\nHowever, not every tragic person can become a hero. A tragic hero struggles to protect his dignity and self-respect and independence in an increasingly exotic and impersonal world. He is voluntary to sacrifice anything, even his life, to detain his beliefs, whether he is of high social class or not. This is convey by Miller as the modern tragic hero.\nIn the play, Willy Loman, in order to achieve his American Dream, worked very challenging and did not give up, I am building something with this firm, Ben, and if a man is building something he must be on the r ight track (Miller 85). correct when he had lost everything and can n...

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