Death of a Salesman is a play written by Arthur Miller. The novel is mainly about a salesman, Willy Loman. He worked hard all his life striving for success, but is at the edge of falling. His family is in the depths of poverty, and he is trying his hardest to provide for them. Willy kept having hallucinations about his happier years, and that sparked some different answers as well. The speaker of the play is unknown, but you can assume Arthur Miller is the narrator. The story takes place in New York during the 1940s, where the idea of the "American Dream" was popular amongst people. Many people came to America to make their dreams come true of that perfect family. The Loman family lived in the depths of Brooklyn, surrounded with apartments and no sunshine.
The audience of the play is whoever reads it or watches the play. He tried to connect to the audience in a whole other way, trying to make the audience step into his shoes and experience life through his perspective. The purpose of this play/novel was to inform the audience about life in the forties, and the American Dream. The subject was the American Dream and betrayal. This was a great book, and I enjoyed reading every detail of it.
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