Willy Loman In Bad-Faith: a Study of Death of a Salesman In Sartrean Terms

A Study of Willy Loman's Self-Deception in the Failure of the American Dream

by Vaibhav Dutt Sharma*,

- Published in Journal of Advances and Scholarly Researches in Allied Education, E-ISSN: 2230-7540

Volume 1, Issue No. 2, Apr 2011, Pages 0 - 0 (0)

Published by: Ignited Minds Journals


ABSTRACT

Arthur Miller was one of the leading Americanplaywrights of the twentieth century. Miller wrote Death of a Salesman, whichwon the Pulitzer Prize and transformed Miller into a national sensation. Manycritics described Death of a Salesman as the first great American tragedy, andMiller gained eminence as a man who understood the deep essence of the UnitedStates. Death of a Salesman was first produced on Broadway on Feb 10, 1949. Theplay has been studied generally in terms of a commentary on the failure of theAmerican Dream. Willy Loman has generally been regarded as a victim of theAmerican society. But this paper attempts to study Willy Loman’s character notas a victim either of American dream or of the society but as a man who himselfis responsible for his failure for not realizing his own nature as well as thenature of his dreams. He deceives himself and lives in ‘bad-faith’.

KEYWORD

Willy Loman, bad-faith, Death of a Salesman, American Dream, Arthur Miller