Preview

Chrysanthemums vs Death of a Salesman

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
538 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Chrysanthemums vs Death of a Salesman
Jessica Raines
ENC1102- 9:30
Final Essay
May 6, 2013
Choice 1: Similarity between “The Chrysanthemums” and “Death of a Salesman”

In these two stories there isn’t much similarity except how old they both are and the theme, individual worth. By definition Individual worth is the sense of one’s own value or worth as a human being. Unfortunately in both of these stories they have very little individual worth. In Steinbeck’s “The Chrysanthemums” Elisa is probably the smartest character in the story but gets little recognition for being a female. She can’t do anything with the Ranches business except stand by on the side and watch. Always being on the sideline has made Elisa have very low self esteem. Even when the tinker comes into the picture Elisa knows she is probably better at fixing things them him but it is him who gets to go around the country and adventuring every day. Both Henry and the tinker try to make Elisa feel better by taking the Chrysanthemums and by taking her out to dinner but neither recognize her potential or acknowledge it. I think the fact that Elisa always has to hide something she’s good at or be put down by a man would make anyone not notice their individual worth. In “Death of a Salesman” The struggle to find individual worth is within each character. Willy Loman is a traveling salesman who has tried his entire life to reach the American Dream. The overwhelming tension in his family is caused by the failure for Willy to reach his goal. He is so focused on becoming a successful salesman he never really grasps a true understanding of himself. His suicide later in the story reveals that his individual worth he carried his whole life was never realized. He never felt the large amounts of gratitude and love his family produced and from this aspect of it really left you feeling bad for him. Unlike Willy and Happy, Biff feels compelled to seek the truth about himself. While his father and brother are unable to accept the miserable

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    In the short story, “The Chrysanthemums” John Steinbeck tells the story of Elisa Allen living on a ranch in the Salinas Valley with her husband Henry. Elisa is a thirty-five year-old house wife that takes pride in growing chrysanthemums. One day while cutting down last year’s chrysanthemums her husband tells her that he has just sold thirty cattle and is going to take her out to dinner and a movie. After that, a traveling tinker stops by her house and offers to fix any pots or sharpen any knives. After a conversation with the tinker, Elisa figures out for herself that she doesn’t get to express herself very much. Elisa eventually finds something for the tinker to fix and even gives him a chrysanthemum plant for one of his other customers. She later sees that the tinker threw the plant out and that she is unsatisfied with her marriage. “The Chrysanthemums” is told in the third person point of view, but the narration is presented almost entirely from Elisa’s point of view forcing us to try and understand Elisa just as the other characters in the story do.…

    • 682 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    While Biff (Willy’s eldest son) was growing up, he did everything he could to be like his father - he idolised and respected him always. However, as much as his son Biff tried to be like his father, he is, in actuality quite the different to him. Biff’s overall nature is an opposition of what a normal model for the American dream is; he has understood that it is just a myth and a pointless dream- and has acknowledged that reality. Biff’s character is stronger than that of his father, just because of that realisation. The acceptance of that reality can be seen on page 18 when he…

    • 109 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    One of the many reasons that I feel a connection with Biff and his relationship with his father, Willy, is in the play there are many moments when Willy contradicts himself. At the beginning of Act I, Willy is back home to find out that his sons are back living at home and he is really upset about this at first. Then he mentions, “‘...work a lifetime to pay off a house. You finally own it, and there's nobody to live in it’” (15). Later, he starts a fight with his wife Linda, saying that Biff is a lazy bum. Linda is fighting against Willy, saying that Biff is just trying to find himself and that Willy should not criticize him so much and Willy ends up changing his mind very easily and agreeing with Linda that Biff is not lazy, but even hardworking (16). Willy says many times in the play that…

    • 1311 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Willie tries to force his beliefs onto Biff, and Biff, in response, leaves his house. Biffs personality changes because he is out in the real world doing what he loves, no listening to his father who is often yelling about to be a better person. Biff realizes his own dream and follows it against his father’s hopes. Biff becomes a more independent individual because of Willies unintentional push out of the nest. Biff also shown no remorse after his father’s suicide. “Biff: He had the wrong dreams, All wrong. Happy: Don’t say that! Biff: He never knew who he was”(Act II). This quote comes after Willies suicide. Biff blames Willie and believes that his occupation, a sales man, drove him to suicide to provide money. Biff thinks that Willie would have been happier working a labor job, a dream of his own. Biff and Huck were both shaped by their fathers to become slightly more calloused to the…

    • 1099 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In this Biff also realized who he is. Knows his path unlike Willy who is lost.…

    • 330 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    As a young boy, Biff, Willy’s oldest son showed athletic promise and charming personality that made him proud. Willy instilled in Biff and Happy; that in order to be successful in life all you needed was personality and great looks. He put little emphasis on hard work and repeatedly throughout the play applauds his boys for their popularity. For example, when a neighbor boy, Bernard attempts to get a young Biff to study for his Math regents, Willy…

    • 724 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Biff Loman is a young man, 34 years of age, who has spent the majority of his adulthood bouncing from one job to the next. For this reason, his father, Willy, has much displeasure in his son’s lack of financial stability, which is a major factor in his own health complications. Although Biff suggest that there are other reasons leading to Willy’s complications, Biff’s brother, Happy, informs him that his father often has conversations with himself that support the claim that Biff is to blame. The relationship between father and son is volatile, yet loving at the same time. Willy has placed high expectations upon…

    • 989 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    For one, a failure to one can be seen as a success to another. It can be through a job, your family, or through financial success. In the book Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller, the author brings up the topic of failure multiple times. Many of these failures are demonstrated through the struggles of the main character, Willy. Though the audience never actually can look into the main character’s mind, one can clearly see the internal battle that is happening inside Willy Loman’s head. He often is seen dwelling on the more upsetting aspects of his life, never particularly taking notice to all the good he has…

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Willy Loman’s obsession with the American Dream and its ideals has strongly affected the people Biff and Happy have become. Due to Willy’s teachings and influences, both his sons lead a different life from what they expected. Willy believed that his sons’ attributes would lead them to a successful lifestyle with no conflicts. Yet, being well-liked and attractive lead both sons to live a lie, nowhere near success. Biff becomes an underachiever who can’t hold a job, and feels dissatisfied with the fact that his life has been based on a lie. Happy lives in his brother’s shadow, becoming his father’s younger self, lying and manipulating reality to his favor.…

    • 647 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Willy Loman Dishonest

    • 412 Words
    • 2 Pages

    To start he leaves his mother and brother to deal with his father who is literally going crazy. Similarly, he never tells his mother or brother about his father’s affair nor does he confront him. Even though Biff loves his family, he and Happy treat women poorly and manage to abandon their father at a restaurant for two attractive women. Certainly, having a father who greatly influenced his life choices, left Biff with a great disadvantage to becoming successful. Finally near the end, Biff recognizes how bad the web of lies has become when his father becomes disillusioned and has difficultly telling reality from memory or fantasy.…

    • 412 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Flawed Character Flaws

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The Characterization and plot of Death of a Salesman verified that faults in a character make it more understandable. The main character of this play is Willy Loman. He is insecure, self-deluded peregrinating salesman. Willy believes wholeheartedly in…

    • 380 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    One the other hand Biff still tries to “answer the call” and try to prove to his father that he will make something of himself. Moreover, Willy wanted to be a salesman for the reason that he wanted to make money and support his family. So, he tries to inspire them when he says, Don’t say? Tell you a secret, boys. Don’t breathe it to a soul. Someday I’ll have my own business, and I’ll never have to leave home any more” (Pg. 30). Ever since Biff was in highschool he followed his father’s orders and played football so he could get into a good college. Since Biff is the typical jock, he relied on his looks to get him anywhere in life. Just like any everyday hero Biff needed to leave in order to find himself and go on that journey. At first Biff was mesmerized by beauty of the farm and that made him realize that he is in the same monotonous job everyday . However, when Biff goes back home he is reminded of why he left in the first place; he realizes he has to go find himself yet again. For example Biff says, “I’ve always made a point of not wasting his life, and everything I come back here I know that all I’ve done is to waste my life.” (Pg. 22-23) In order to “answer the call” Biff promises his dad that he going to find himself a steady job at Bill Oliver’s. Similar to Roy, Biff like any hero has their flaws for the reason…

    • 1268 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Biff Loman: Tragic Hero

    • 900 Words
    • 4 Pages

    According to Willy, Biff’s flaw is that he has no goals or drive. Biff does not seem to have the desire to become a salesman like his father. When talking to Linda, Willy explains, “The trouble is he’s lazy, goddammit” (Miller 8). Biff’s mother Linda, on the other hand, has a different opinion about her son. As stated by Linda, “I think he’s still lost, Willy. I think he’s very lost” (Miller 8). Though his parents seem to dwell on his flaws, his brother Hap tries to be the…

    • 900 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After this event occurs, Biff throws away everything he ever worked for in order to “punish” his father. He allows himself to fail math, to not go to college, and to abandon his family. Biff then goes to the South, where he works as a farmhand and eventually winds up in jail. He does all of this after realizing that all of the values his father had instilled in him were not even being lived out by his father. Everything Biff thought he knew appears to be a lie to him. In Willy’s mind, these values were true and he was simply showing his sons that they were both more than capable of being successful. By squandering his entire future, Biff shows that he is not capable and does not care enough to be a success.…

    • 555 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    "Death of a Salesman" strongly presents some of the ideology of the American Dream. Willy Loman himself strongly believes that to achieve complete satisfaction in life, a man must be popular, successful and affluent. Throughout the play, Willy constantly talks of owning his 'own business'. Willy feels that he is an inadequate person if he is not 'well liked' or able to afford expensive material possessions like a luxurious refrigerator or a 'chevvy'. Willy's obsession with owning material goods is very much linked to the theme of the American Dream mirroring a capitalist society. Within a capitalist society, only a few members are allowed to be successful. This reflects the reality of the American Dream where the minority has prospered and are happily living the American Dream whereas the rest of society lurches through life feeling miserable and inadequate. This feeling of failure is reflected in the actions and dialogue of Willy Loman. Willy feels that he needs the material possessions, popularity and money to prove himself a worthy member of American society. Without it he feels like a failure.…

    • 1015 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics