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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
(5 pp). Much of the Arthur Miller's play
The Death of A Salesman, looks at the loss of one
man's idea of the American Dream of success, or
'making it.' It occurs to Willy Loman that he is
not making it, as he thought he would, neither
are his sons. Loman was so busy focused on himself
and his first son, that not much thought is given
to his second son, Hap. Happy, who hardly follows
the nature of his name, will be the focus of this
discussion.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_BBwlyhap.rtf
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those comments that are for you. You may want to print two versions of this sample paper - one that has the bold type so that you can more
easily understand it, and another without the bold print to test yourself to see if you remember it. Also in this type of sample paper it is a good
idea to include either something that has been talked about in class, or something personal in either the body of the text, or the conclusion. Introduction Much of the
Arthur Millers play The Death of A Salesman, looks at the loss of one mans idea of the American Dream of success, or "making it." It occurs to
Willy Loman that he is not making it, as he thought he would, neither are his sons. Loman was so busy focused on himself and his first son, that
not much thought is given to his second son, Hap. Happy, who hardly follows the nature of his name, will be the focus of this discussion. (Note to the
student-what we are going to look at is if Happy really is the same as his name, or if Miller is trying to compensate for this character being unhappy.)
"Happy" The irony of the situation is doubled by the shadow (and what is the shadow of a dream,
but a nightmare) existence of Hap. He is always eclipsed by Biff, and appears to be content with that role. Both of the brothers are equally damaged "boys" who
have "grown" to be 30-something men crippled by the philosophy Willy has drilled into them: "Its who you know, the smile on your face - contacts" that bring success. Ironically,
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