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Many Definitions Of Tragedy Claim That At The End Of The Play Positives Have Emerged. Is It Possible To See Anything Positive In The Ending Of 'Death Of A Salesman'?

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Many Definitions Of Tragedy Claim That At The End Of The Play Positives Have Emerged. Is It Possible To See Anything Positive In The Ending Of 'Death Of A Salesman'?
1. Many definitions of tragedy claim that at the end of the play positives have emerged. Is it possible to see anything positive in the ending of 'Death of a Salesman'?

The play "Death of a Salesman" shows the final demise of Willy Loman, a sixty- year-old salesman in the America of the 1940's, who has deluded himself all his life about being a big success in the business world. It also portrays his wife
Linda, who "plays along" nicely with his lies and tells him what he wants to hear, out of compassion. The book describes the last day of his life, but there are frequent "flashbacks" in which Willy relives key events of the past, often confusing them with what is happening in the present. His two sons, Biff and
Happy, who are in their 30's, have become failures like himself. Both of them have gone from idolising their father in their youth to despising him in the present. On the last few pages of the play, Willy finally decides to take his own life. Not only out of desperation because he just lost his job, with which he was hardly earning enough to pay ordinary expenses at the end. He does it primarily because he thinks that the life insurance payout will allow
Biff to come to something, so that at least one of the Lomans will fulfil his unrealistic dream of great wealth and success. But even here in one of his last moments, while having a conversation from the past, he continues to lie to himself by saying that his funeral will be a big event, and that there will be guests from all over his former working territory in attendance. Yet as was to be expected, this is not what happens, none of the people he sold to come. Maybe he has forgotten that the "old buyers" have already died of old age. His imagined dialogue partner tells him that Biff will consider the impending act one of cowardice. This obviously indicates that he himself also thinks that it's very probable that Biff will hate him even more for doing it, as the presence of
"Ben", a man whom he

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