Death of
a Salesman Study Questions
1. In what context does the
expression "death of a salesman" (81) occur in the play? Who is
"Dave Singleman"? What is the significance of his name? What is
Willy's attitude toward him? What does he find admirable in him? What is the attraction which surrounds the figure of Singleman and his
saleman profession? Is Willy's motivation for going into salesmanship related
to a way of dying rather than a way of living? What is the meaning of Singleman
dying while riding a train? Are these issues related to those in Max Weber? Is
Willy driven by a transcendental and irrational goal similar to that of Weber's
workers in a capitalist economy?
2. What is the significance of
Willy's suicide attempts? Why and how is he trying to kill himself? What does
he expect will result from his death? Will that happen?
3. How is selling contrasted with
other kinds of work? What does Willy sell? What would Willy rather do? What
does Biff want to do? How does Willy feel about it?
4. What in particular seem to be
Willy's most pressing needs? Are those needs only material and financial or
also psychological and affective? What does Willy want? How is his last name
expressive of his lacks and needs? What is the origin of his needs and desires?
How does the figure of Willy's father function in the determination of his
character and his desires? Are there any ironies in the "streak of
self-reliance" (81) in Willy's father? How does Willy expect to have his
desires satisfied by the sales profession? Is he correct in his expectation of
material and psychological reward in his line of work? What does he
misunderstand concerning the sales profession and the business world in
general? What about his perception that there used to be "respect, and
comradeship, and gratitude in it" (81)? Is he right about that or is he
idealizing the past? Are his perceptions related perhaps to the transition
between traditional and modern capitalism pointed out by Weber?
5. How is Willy
treated by the company he works for? What are his expectations? How is
his boss, Howard Wagner, characterized? Is Howard's name significant? Who named
him? How does he feel about Willy? What is the significance of the scene where
Howard is playing with a recorder while Willy is trying to talk to him? What do
we learn about Howard's family life through the voices heard from the recorder?
What was Willy trying to get from Howard? What does he actually get?
6. Willy Loman was preoccupied with
being well liked. How is being liked related to having friends? How many friends
did Willy have? Generally speaking, how does "business" mix with
loyalty and friendship? Recall HowardÕs observation "ÕCause you gotta
admit, business is business" (80) and consider WillyÕs speech on p. 81
about the loss of personality, respect, comradeship, and gratitude in the world
of sales.
7. What is the difference between
having a nice personality and being a good person? (What is a
"personality" anyway?) Relatedly, what is the difference between
having a nice lifestyle and living well? Do you see anything in common between
the notions of "personality" and "lifestyle"? If so, please
describe it.
8. What is the significance of the
figure of Willy's brother Ben? What role does Ben play in the story? Is Ben
dead or alive? How is he manifested in the action of the play? What were his
business activities? Where was he active? What is the meaning of the imagery of
the jungle, Africa, Alaska, gold, and diamond mines? Why does Ben say that he
"never kept books" (47)? What is his attitude toward the other members
of the family? What story does he offer about himself? (Is this similar to the
case of Bounderby?). What story does Ben tell about his and Willy's father? How
is this story related to that of Dave Singleman and other figures such as J. P.
Morgan and B. F. Goodrich? What is the meaning of the mock fight between Ben
and Biff? What does it reveal? What is the lesson Ben intends to teach Biff?
9. What is the meaning of the flute
music heard at various points throughout the play? What/who is this music
associated with? Why is it significant that Willy's father was supposedly a
flute maker and salesman?
10.What is the significance of the
name of the restaurant, "Frank's Chop House," where Willy, Biff, and
Happy meet? Is it important that Willy's old boss (Howard's father) was also
named Frank? What promises did Frank make to Willy? Is all of this somehow
related to Charley's description of the famous American financier J. P. Morgan
as looking like a "butcher" (97)? What businesses and companies is
the name of J. P. Morgan associated with in American economic history? What is
the overall significance of the meat, chopping, and butchering imagery and its
relations to business and businessmen?
11.Is Willy Loman a tragic figure or
is he pathetic? Charley repeatedly tells Willy to "grow up." What is
he getting at, and is he right to think that Willy never did "grow
up"? Is Linda a loving wife or a self-deceiving "enabler" of family
pathologies? Is she aware of WillyÕs infidelity? Why does Miller conceive of
Happy as an even more desperate character than Biff? Is his name ironic?
12.Who are Miss Forsythe and Miss
Letta? How does Happy meet them? What is the meaning of his conversations with
them? Why does he say Miss Forsythe is a "cover girl"? What does he
quickly uncover about her? How does he do it? What is the meaning of Happy's
relationship with these and other women? Is this similar to Willy's
relationship to Miss Francis? Why does Willy give her stockings? Why are the
scenes at the restaurant (with Miss Letta and Miss Forsythe) and the hotel
(with Miss Francis) juxtaposed? Why is Willy left behind at the restaurant? Why
does Willy have a sudden urge to plant seeds after that incident?
13.What happens to Biff
during his visit to Bill Oliver? Why did he steal the gold fountain pen? What
discovery does he make as he runs downstairs in the office building?
14.The Lomans were not only
habitually dishonest; they were dishonest with themselves about their
dishonesty. How do you suppose they got into such a habit? How is selling
related to honesty? Are there relations between these situations and, for
example, the case of young Tom Gradgrind? What leads characters like Tom and
Biff to become thieves? Why does Willy habitually lie about his business deals
and other matters? What happens eventually to his understanding of his own
lies? How is this related to Willy's increasing loss of touch with reality
throughout the action of the play?
15.How is Willy's infidelity to his
wife related to the other issues in the play? Was that infidelity to blame for
BiffÕs aimlessness?
16.What is the nature of the
relations between business and sports? What is Willy's attitude toward sports?
What is the significance of the Ebbets Field game and subsequent events? What
about the conversation which Willy has with Charley
before the game? What does Charley think of sports? Is it significant that
Charley succeeds and Willy fails in business? What is Charley's explanation of
his own success? How about Charley's son, Bernard? What role does he play? What
is his profession? Is he successful? Why? How is his story significant or
revealing in reference to the concerns of the play?
17.What happened in Boston after the
Ebbets Field game? Why did Biff give up his ambitions after those events?
18.What is the significance and role
of the farm and farming imagery? How does it relate to business and urban life?
What does Willy miss about the old days? What has changed?
19.What do you make of the many
references to how the Loman house has been closed in by other buildings and,
generally, to the contrasts between life out in the open and city life that
come up frequently in the play?
20.How do "planned
obsolescence," insurance, and "buying on time" (credit) figure
into the play? What are Willy's attitudes toward the products (cars,
refrigerator, home, etc.) that he buys and uses?
21.How is the figure of Ben related
to Willy's consideration of suicide and of a life insurance payoff after his
death? Is the conversation between Ben and Willy on that issue something that
actually took place? How are Willy's various dreams, memories, and illusions
brought together in this scenes? Why does Ben refer to
a boat that is about to depart? What is Miller alluding to? What are the
implications?
22.What commentary on modern commerce
do you think that Arthur Miller means to make with his play? What is the
"business world" like? Ultimately, what forces entrap Willy and drive
him to self-destruction? Where are those forces to be located? How can they be
identified?
23.What is the meaning of Happy's
comments at Willy's funeral? How about Linda's final words, "We're free
... We're free ..." Why is the flute music the
last sound to be heard?
24.Does Willy Loman die a martyr?
How do Linda's and his sons' interpretations of his death differ?
25.Death of a Salesman is one of
the foundational texts describing the American dream. How does Miller's play differ
from the more traditional Horatio Alger model? Is Miller overwhelmingly cynical
on the topic?
26.Discuss the motif of women's
stockings in Death of a Salesman? What are Willy and Biff's attitudes toward
them? How do Linda and the woman with whom Willy is having an affair regard
them?
27.Describe the significance of
names in this play. How do Happy and Biff's names contrast with or support
their characters? Interpret the name "Loman."
28.What is the role of modernity in
Death of a Salesman? Have cars and gas heaters fundamentally changed the
American dream? How does Miller view these innovations?
29.How reliable is the narrative in
Death of a Salesman? Are Willy's words to be trusted? Biff's?
How does the rotation of time affect the narrative?
30.Discuss the gender relationships
in this play. Are there any positive models for a harmonious relationship? Does
Miller find this concept plausible?
31.Analyze the role of seeds in Act
II's final segment. What do they stand for?
32.Discuss Linda as the moral center
of the play. Does ill-treatment at the hands of her
sons and husband enhance or diminish this role?
33.Discuss examples of ways in
which Willy Loman's suicide is foreshadowed in the first act of the play.