Wednesday, July 31, 2019
Death of a Salesman Critical insights Essay
In a 2003 interview with his biographer, Christopher Bigsby, about the inherent structure of his plays, Arthur Miller explained, ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s all about the languageâ⬠(Bigsby, ââ¬Å"Millerâ⬠). Millerââ¬â¢s declaration about the centrality of language in the creation of drama came at the end of his almost seventy-year career. He had completed his final play, Finishing the Picture, and a little more than a year later, he became ill and subsequently died in February 2005. Thus Millerââ¬â¢s statement can be seen as a final avowal about how language operates in dramatic dialogue, a concern that had obsessed him since the start of his career when he wrote his first play, No Villain, at the University of Michigan in 1935. Despite Millerââ¬â¢s proclamation, not enough critical attention has been paid to the sophisticated use of language that pervades his dialogue. Throughout his career, Miller often was subject to reviews in which critics mostly excoriated him for what they judged as a failed use of language in his plays. For example, in the Nation review of the original production of Death of a Salesman in 1949, Joseph Wood Krutch criticized the play for ââ¬Å"its failure to go beyond literal meaning and its undistinguished dialogue. Unlike Tennessee Williams, Miller does not have a unique sensibility, new insight, fresh imagination or a gift for languageâ⬠(283-84). In 1964, Richard Gilman judged that After the Fall lacks structural focus and contains vague rhetoric. He concluded that Millerââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"verbal inadequacy [has] never been more flagrantly exhibitedâ⬠(6). John Simonââ¬â¢s New York review of the 1994 Broadway production of Broken Glass opined that ââ¬Å"Millerâ⬠â¢s ultimate failure is his language: Tone-deafness in a playwright is only a shade less bad than in a composer.â⬠In a June 2009 review of Christopher Bigsbyââ¬â¢s authorized biography of Miller, Terry Teachout judged that Miller ââ¬Å"too often made the mistake of using florid, pseudo-poetic languageâ⬠(72). These reviews illustrate how, as a language stylist, Arthur Miller was underappreciated, too often overshadowed by his contemporary Tennessee Williams, whose major strength as a dramatist for many critics lies in the ââ¬Å"lyricismâ⬠of his plays. As Arthur K. Oberg pointed out, ââ¬Å"In the established image, Millerââ¬â¢s art is masculine and craggy; Williamsââ¬â¢, poetic and delicateâ⬠(303). Because Miller has so often been pigeonholed as a ââ¬Å"socialâ⬠dramatist, most of the criticism of his work focuses on the cultural relevance of his plays and ignores detailed discussions of his languageââ¬âespecially of its poetic elements. Most critics are content to regard his dialogue as ââ¬Å"colloquial,â⬠judging that Miller best used what Leonard Moss described as ââ¬Å"the common manââ¬â¢s languageâ⬠(52) to reflect the social concerns of his characters. The assumption is often made that the manufacturers, salesmen, Puritan farmers, dockwork ers, housewives, policemen, doctors, lawyers, executives, and bankers who compose the bulk of Millerââ¬â¢s characters speak a realistic prose dialogueââ¬âa style that is implicitly antithetical to poetic language. This prevailing opinion of Miller as a dramatist who merely uses the common manââ¬â¢s language has been reinforced largely by a lack of in-depth critical analyses of how figurative language works in his canon. In his November 1998 review of the Chicago run of the fiftieth anniversary production of Death of a Salesman, Ben Brantley noted that, ââ¬Å"as recent Miller scholarship has suggested again and again, the playââ¬â¢s images and rhythms have the patterns of poetryâ⬠(E3). In reality, though, relatively few critics have thoroughly examined this aspect not only of Salesman but also of Millerââ¬â¢s entire dramatic canon.1 Thomas M. Tammaro judges ââ¬Å"that critical attention to Millerââ¬â¢s drama has been lured from textual analysis to such non-textual concerns as biography and Miller as a social dramatistâ⬠(10).2 Moreover, classroom discussions of Millerââ¬â¢s masterpieces Death of a Salesman and The Crucible (1953) mostly focus on these biographical an d social concerns in addition to characterization and thematic issues but rarely discuss language and dialogue. Five years after his passing, it is time to recognize that Arthur Miller created a unique dramatic idiom that undoubtedly marks him as significant language stylist within twentieth- and twenty-first-centuryà American and world drama. More readers and critics should see his dialogue not exclusively as prose but also as poetry, what Gordon W. Couchman has called Millerââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"rare gift for the poetic in the colloquialâ⬠(206). Although Miller seems to work mostly in a form of colloquial prose, there are many moments in his plays when the dialogue clearly elevates to poetry. Miller often takes what appear to be the colloquialisms, clichà ©s, and idioms of the common manââ¬â¢s language and reveals them as poetic language, especially by shifting words from their denotative to connotative meanings. Moreover, he significantly employs the figurative devices of metaphor, symbol, and imagery to give poetic significance to prose dialect. In addition, in many texts Miller embeds series of metaphorsââ¬âmany are extendedââ¬âthat possess particular connotations within the societies of the individual plays. Most important, these figurative devices significantly support the tragic conflicts and social themes that are the focus of every Miller play. By deftly mixing these figurative devices of symbolism, imagery, and metaphor with colloquial prose dialogue, Miller combines prose and poetry to create a unique d ramatic idiom. Most critics, readers, and audiences seem to overlook this aspect of Millerââ¬â¢s work: the poetry is in the prose and the prose is in the poetry. Indeed, poetic elements pervade most of Millerââ¬â¢s plays. For example, in All My Sons, religious allusions, symbols, and images place the themes of sacrifice and redemption in a Christian context. In Death of a Salesman, the extended metaphors of sports and trees convey Willy Lomanââ¬â¢s struggle to achieve the American Dream. In The Crucible, the poetic language illustrates the conflicts that polarize the Salem community as a series of opposing imagesââ¬âheat and cold, white and black, light and dark, soft and hardââ¬âsignify the Salemitesââ¬â¢ dualistic view of the world. In A View from the Bridge, metaphors of purity and innocence give mythic importance to Eddie Carboneââ¬â¢s sexual, psychological, and moral struggles. After the Fall uses extended metaphors of childhood and religion to support Quentinââ¬â¢s psychological quest for redemption. The Ride Down Mt. Morgan connects metaphors of transportation and travel to Lyman Feltââ¬â¢s literal and figurat ive fall, and Broken Glass uses images of mirrors and glass to relateà the world of the European Jew at the beginning of the Holocaust to Sylvia and Phillip Gellburgââ¬â¢s shattered sexual world. That most critics continue to fail to recognize Millerââ¬â¢s sophisticated use of poetic elements is striking, for it is this very facility for which many other playwrights are praised, and the history of drama is intimately intertwined with the history of poetry. For most of Western dramatic history, plays were written in verse: the ancient Greek playwrights of the fifth century b.c.e. composed their tragedies in a verse frequently accompanied by music; the rhyming couplets of the Everyman dramatist were the de rigueur medieval form; and English Renaissance plays were poetic masterpieces. Shakespeareââ¬â¢s supremacy as a dramatist lies in his adaptation of the early modern English language into a dramatic dialogue that combines prose and poetry. For example, Hamletââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"quintessence of dustâ⬠speech is lyrical prose. In the twentieth century, critics praised the verse plays of T. S. Eliot, Maxwell Anderson, Christopher Isherwood, and W. H. Auden. Even more baffling about this critical neglect is that Miller readily acknowledged his attraction to poetry and dramatic verse. His views on language, particularly poetic language, are evident in the prodigious number of essays he produced throughout his career. Criticism has mostly ignored this large body of nonfiction writing in which Miller frequently expounds on the nature of language and dialogue, the tension between realistic prose and poetic language in twentieth-century drama, and the complex evolution of poetic language throughout his plays.3 For example, in his 1993 essay ââ¬Å"About Theatre Languageâ⬠he writes: It was inevitable that I had to confront the problem of dramatic language. . . .I gradually came to wonder if the essential pressure toward poetic dramatic languageââ¬âif not of stylization itselfââ¬âcame from the inclusion of society as a major element in the playââ¬â¢s story or vision. Manifestly, prose realism was the language of the individual and private life, poetry the language of man in crowds, in society. Put another way, prose is the language of family relations; it is the inclusion of the larger world beyond that naturally opens a play to the poetic. . . . How to find a style that would at one and the same time deeply engage an American audience, which insisted on a recognizable reality of characters, locales, and themes, while opening the stage to considerations of public morality and the mythic social fatesââ¬âin short, the invisible? (82) * * * Millerââ¬â¢s attraction to poetic dramatic dialogue can be traced back to his development as a playwright, particularly his time as a student at the University of Michigan in the mid-1930s and the early years of his great successes in the 1940s and 1950s, when his views on dramatic form, structure, aesthetics, and language were evolving. Miller knew little about the theater when he arrived in Ann Arbor from his home in Brooklyn, but during these formative college years, he became aware of German expressionism, and he read August Strindberg and Henrik Ibsen, whom he often acknowledged as major influences on him. Christopher Bigsby has pointed out that Miller always remembered the effect that reading Greek and Elizabethan playwrights at college had on him (Critical Study 419). However, Miller was markedly affected by the social-protest work of Clifford Odets. In his autobiography, Timebends (1987), Miller describes how Odetsââ¬â¢s 1930s plays Waiting for Lefty (1935), Awake and S ing (1935), and Golden Boy (1937) had ââ¬Å"sprung forth a new phenomenon, a leftist challenge to the system, the poet suddenly leaping onto the stage and disposing of middle-class gentility, screaming and yelling and cursing like somebody off the Manhattan streetsâ⬠(229). Most important for Miller, Odets brought to American drama a concern for language: ââ¬Å"For the very first time in America, language itself had marked a playwright as uniqueâ⬠(229). To Miller, Odets was ââ¬Å"The only poet, I thought, not only in the social protest theater, but in all of New Yorkâ⬠(212). After Miller won his first Avery Hopwood Award at Michigan, he was sent to Professor Kenneth Rowe, whose chief contribution to Millerââ¬â¢s development was cultivating his interest in the dynamics of play construction. Odets and Rowe clearly were considerably strong influences on Miller as he developedà his concern with language and his form broke out of what he termed the ââ¬Å"dusty naturalistic habit â⬠(Timebends 228) of Broadway, but other influences would also compel him to write dramatic verse. The work of Thornton Wilder, particularly Our Town (1938), spoke to him, and in Timebends Miller acknowledges that Our Town was the nearest of the 1930s plays in ââ¬Å"reaching for lyricismâ⬠(229). Tennessee Williams is another playwright whom Miller frequently credited with influencing his art and the craft of his language. He credited the newness of The Glass Menagerie (1944) to the playââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"poetic liftâ⬠(Timebends 244) and was particularly struck b y A Streetcar Named Desire (1947), proclaiming that Williams had given him license to speak in dramatic language ââ¬Å"at full throatâ⬠(Timebends 182). Moreover, Miller practiced what he had learned and espoused. In fact, he reported that when he was first beginning his career he was ââ¬Å"up to [his] neckâ⬠in writing many of his full-length and radio plays in verse (ââ¬Å"Interviewâ⬠98). When he graduated from Michigan and started his work with the Federal Theatre Project in 1938, he wrote The Golden Years, a verse play about Montezuma. In a letter to Professor Rowe, he reported that he found writing verse much easier than writing prose: ââ¬Å"I made the discovery that in verse you are forced to be brief and to the point. Verse squeezes out fat and youââ¬â¢re left with the real meaning of the languageâ⬠(Bigsby, Arthur Miller 155). Also, he explained that much of Death of a Salesman and all of The Crucible were originally written in verse; the one-act version of A View from the Bridge (1955) was written in an intriguing mixture of verse and prose, and Miller regretted his failure to do the same in The America n Clock (1980) (Bigsby, Critical Introduction 136). However, Miller found an American theater hostile to the poetic form. Miller himself pointed out that the United States had no tradition of dramatic verse (ââ¬Å"Interviewâ⬠98) as compared to Europe. In the 1930s, Maxwell Anderson was one of the few American playwrights incorporating blank verse into his plays, and the English theater witnessed some interest in poetic drama in the 1940s and 1950s, most notably with Christopher Fry and T. S. Eliot. In reality, dramatic verse had been in sharp decline since the late nineteenth century, when the realistic prose dialogue used by Henrik Ibsen in Norwayà was adopted by George Bernard Shaw in England and then later employed by Eugene Oââ¬â¢Neill in the United States. Miller also judged that American actors had difficulty speaking the verse line (ââ¬Å"Interviewâ⬠98). Further, Miller came of age at a time when American audiences were demanding realism, the musical comedy was gaining in dominance, and commercial Broadway pr oducers were disinterested in verse drama. Christopher Bigsby has pointed out that Miller was ââ¬Å"in his own mind, an essentially poetic, deeply metaphoric writer who had found himself in a theater resistant to such, particularly on Broadway, which he continued to think of as his natural home, despite its many deficienciesâ⬠(Critical Study 358). Struggling with how to accept this reality, Miller accommodated his natural inclination to verse by developing a dramatic idiom that reconciled his poetic urge with the realism demanded by the aesthetics of the American stage. Thus he infused poetic language into his prose dialogue. * * * Letââ¬â¢s examine how some of these poetic devicesââ¬âsymbolism, imagery, and metaphorââ¬â operate in Millerââ¬â¢s masterpiece, Death of a Salesman. From the outset of the play, Miller makes trees and sports into metaphors signifying Willy Lomanââ¬â¢s struggle to achieve the American Dream within the competitive American business world. Trees symbolize Willyââ¬â¢s dreams, sports the competition for economic success.4 Miller sustains these metaphors throughout the entire text with images of boxing, burning, wood, nature, and fighting to make them into crucial unifying structures. In addition, Millerââ¬â¢s predilection for juxtaposing the literal and figurative meanings of words is particularly evident in Salesman as the abstract concepts of competition and dreaming are vivified by concrete objects and actions such as boxing, fists, lumber, and ashes. Trees are an excellent illustration of how Miller uses literal and figurative meanings. Two references in act 1, scene 1, immediately establish their importance in the play. When Willy unexpectedly arrives home, he explains that he was unable to drive to Portland for his sales call because he keptà becoming absorbed in the countryside scenery, where ââ¬Å"the trees are so thick, and the sun is warmâ⬠(14). Although these trees merely seem to distract Willy from driving, he also indicates their connection to dreaming. He tells Linda: ââ¬Å"I absolutely forgot I was driving. If Iââ¬â¢dââ¬â¢ve gone the other way over the white line I mightââ¬â¢ve killed somebody. So I went on againââ¬âand five minutes later Iââ¬â¢m dreaminââ¬â¢ againâ⬠(14). Willyââ¬â¢s inability to concentrate on driving indicates an emotional conflict larger than mere daydreaming. The play reveals how Willy often exists in dreams rather than realityââ¬âdreams of being well liked , of success for his son Biff, of his ââ¬Å"imaginings.â⬠All of these dreams intimately connect to Willyââ¬â¢s confrontation with his failure to achieve the tangible aspects of the American Dream. He is a traveling salesman, and his inability to drive symbolizes his inability to sell, which guarantees that he will fail in the competition to be a ââ¬Å"hot-shot salesman.â⬠The action of the play depicts the last day of Willyââ¬â¢s life and how Willy is increasingly escaping the reality of his failure in reveries of the past, to the point where he often cannot differentiate between reality and illusion. The repetition of the mention of trees in Willyââ¬â¢s second speech in scene 1 cements the importance of trees in the play as a metaphor for these dreams. He complains to Linda about the apartment houses surrounding the Loman home: ââ¬Å"They shouldââ¬â¢ve had a law against apartment houses. Remember those two beautiful elm trees out there? When Biff and I hung the swing between them?â⬠(17). However, these trees are not the trees of the real time of the play; rather, they exist in Willyââ¬â¢s past and, more important, in the ââ¬Å"imaginingsâ⬠of his mind, the place where the more important dramatic action of the play takes place. Millerââ¬â¢s working title for Death of a Salesman was ââ¬Å"The Inside of His Head,â⬠and certainly Willyââ¬â¢s longing for the trees of the past illustrates how dreaming works in his mind. Throughout the entire play, treesââ¬âand all the other images connected to themââ¬âare complicated symbols of an idyllic past for which Willy longs in his dreams, a world where Biff and Hap are young, where Willy can believe himself a hot-shot salesman, where Brooklyn seems an unspoiled wilderness. The irony is that, in reality, the past was not as idyllic as Willy recalls, and the play gradually unfolds the reality ofà Willyââ¬â¢s failures. The metaphor of trees also supports Willyââ¬â¢s unresolved struggle with his son Biff. Willyââ¬â¢s memory of Biff and himself hanging a hammock between the elms is ironic as the two beautiful treesââ¬â¢ absence in the present symbolizes Willyââ¬â¢s failed dreams for Biff. Throughout the play, Miller significantly expands upon the figurative meaning of trees. For example, in act 1, scene 4, Willy responds to Hapââ¬â¢s claims that he will retire Willy for life by remarking: Youââ¬â¢ll retire me for life on seventy goddam dollars a week? And your women and your car and your apartment, and youââ¬â¢ll retire me for life! Christââ¬â¢s sake I couldnââ¬â¢t get past Yonkers today! Where are you guys, where are you? The woods are burning! I canââ¬â¢t drive a car! (41) Willyââ¬â¢s warning that ââ¬Å"the woods are burningâ⬠extends the tree metaphor by introducing an important sense of destruction to the trees of Willyââ¬â¢s idyllic world of the past. Since the trees are so identified with Willyââ¬â¢s dreams, the image implies that his dreams are burning tooââ¬âhis dreams for himself as a successful salesman and his dreams for Biff and Hap. The images of burning and destruction are crucial in the play, especially when Linda reveals Willyââ¬â¢s suicide attemptsââ¬âhis own form of destruction, which he enacts at playââ¬â¢s end. We realize that since Willy is so associated with his dreams, he will die when they burn. In fact, Willy repeats this same exact line in act 2 when he arrives at Frankââ¬â¢s Chop House and announces his firing to Hap and Biff. He says: ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢m not interested in stories about the past or any crap of that kind because the woods are burning, boys, you understand? Thereââ¬â¢s a big blaze going on all around. I was fired todayâ⬠(107). This line not only repeats Willyââ¬â¢s warning cry from act 1 but also foreshadows Biffââ¬â¢s climactic plea to Willy to ââ¬Å"take that phony dream and burn itâ⬠(133). The burning metaphorââ¬ânow ironicââ¬âalso appears in Willyââ¬â¢s imagining in the Boston hotel room. As Willy continues to ignore Biffââ¬â¢s knock on the door, the woman says, ââ¬Å"Maybe the hotelââ¬â¢s on fire.â⬠Willy replies, ââ¬Å"Itââ¬â¢s a mistake, thereââ¬â¢s no fireâ⬠(116). Of course, nothing is threatened by a literal fireââ¬âonly by the figurative blaze inside Willyââ¬â¢s head. Once aware of how tree images operate in the play, a reader (or keen theatergoer) can note the cacophony of other references that sustain the metaphor in other scenes. For example, Willy wants Biff to help trim the tree branch that threatens to fall on the Loman house; Biff and Hap steal lumber; Willy plaintively remembers his father carving flutes; Willy tells Ben that Biff can ââ¬Å"fell treesâ⬠; Willy mocks Biff for wanting to be a carpenter and similarly mocks Charley and his son Bernard because they ââ¬Å"canââ¬â¢t hammer a nailâ⬠; Ben buys timberland in Alaska; Biff burns his sneakers in the furnace; Willy speculates about his need for a ââ¬Å"little lumberâ⬠(72) to build a guest house for the boys when they get married; Willy is proud of weathering a twenty-five-year mortgage with ââ¬Å"all the cement, the lumberâ⬠(74) he has put into the house; Willy explains to Ben that ââ¬Å"I am building something with this firm,â⬠something ââ¬Å"you ca nââ¬â¢t feel . . . with your hand like timberâ⬠(86). Finally, there are ââ¬Å"the leaves of day appearing over everythingâ⬠in the graveyard in ââ¬Å"Requiemâ⬠(136). Miller similarly uses boxing in literal and figurative ways throughout the play. In act 1, scene 2, Biff suggests to Hap that they buy a ranch to ââ¬Å"use our muscles. Men built like we are should be working out in the openâ⬠(24). Hap responds to Biff with the first sports reference in the text: ââ¬Å"Thatââ¬â¢s what I dream about, Biff. Sometimes I want to just rip my clothes off in the middle of the store and outbox that goddam merchandise manager. I mean I can outbox, outrun, and outlift anybody in that storeâ⬠(24). As an athlete, Biff, it seems, should introduce the sports metaphor, but, ironically, the sport with which he is identifiedââ¬âfootballââ¬âis not used in any extensive metaphoric way in the play.5 Instead, boxing becomes the extended sports metaphor of the text, and it is not introduced by Biff but rather by Hap, who reinforces it throughout the play to show how Willy has prepared him and Biff only for physical competition, not business or eco nomic competition. Thus Hap expresses his frustration at being a second-rate worker by stressing his physical superiority over his managers. Unable to win in economic competition, he longs to beat his coworkers in a physical match, and it is this contrast between economic and physical competition that intensifies the dramatic interplay between the literal and the figurative language of the play. In fact, the very competitiveness of the American economic system in which Willy and Hap work, and that Biff hates, is consistently put on physical terms in the play. A failure in the competitive workplace, Hap uses the metaphor of physical competitionââ¬âboxing man to manââ¬âyet the play details how Hap was considered less physically impressive than Biff when the two were boys. As an adult, Hap competes in the only physical competition he can winââ¬âsex. He even uses the imagery of rivalry when talking about his sexual conquests of the store managersââ¬â¢ girlfriends: ââ¬Å"Maybe I just have an overdeveloped sense of competition or somethingâ⬠(25). Perhaps knowing that they cannot win, the Lomans resort to a significant amount of cheating in competition: Willy condones Biffââ¬â¢s theft of a football, Biff cheats on his exams, Hap takes bribes, and Willy cheats on Linda. All of this cheating signifies the Lomansââ¬â¢ moral failings as well. The boxing metaphor also illustrates the contrast between Biff and Hap. Boxing as a sports metaphor is quite different from the expected football metaphor: a boxer relies completely on personal physical strength while fighting a single opponent, whereas in football, a team sport, the players rely on group effort and group tactics. Thus the difference between Biff and Hapââ¬âHap as evoker of the boxing metaphor and Biff as a player of a team sportââ¬âis emphasized throughout the text. Moreover, the action of the play relies on the clash of dreams between Biff and Willy. Biff is Willyââ¬â¢s favorite son, and Willyââ¬â¢s own dreams and disappointments are tied to him. Yet Hap, the second-rate son, the second-rate physical specimen, the second-rate worker, is the son who is most like Willy in profession, braggadocio, and sexual swagger. Ultimately, at the playââ¬â¢s end, in ââ¬Å"Requiem,â⬠the boxing metaphor ironically points out Hapââ¬â¢s significance as the actual competitor for Willyââ¬â¢s dream, for he decides to stay in the city because Willy ââ¬Å"fought it out here and this is where Iââ¬â¢m gonna win it for himâ⬠(139). Biffââ¬â¢s boxing contrasts sharply with Hapââ¬â¢s. For example, Biff ironically performs a literal boxing competition with Ben, which juxtaposes with the figurative competition of the play. The boxing reinforces the emphasis thatà has been placed on Biff as the most physically prepared ââ¬Å"specimenâ⬠of the boys. Yet Biff is defeated by Ben; in reality he is ill prepared to fight a boxing match because it is a man-to-man competition, unlike football, the team sport at which he excelled. He is especially ill prepared for Uncle Benââ¬â¢s kind of boxing match because it is not a fair match conducted on a level playing field. As Ben says: ââ¬Å"Never fight fair with a stranger, boy. Youââ¬â¢ll never get out of the jungle that wayâ⬠(49). Thus the literal act of boxing possesses figurative significance. Willy has not conditioned Biff (or, by extension, Hap) for any fightââ¬âfair or unfairââ¬âin the larger figurative ââ¬Å"jungleâ⬠of the play: th e workplace of the American economic system. Willy, too, uses a significant amount of boxing imagery, much of it quite violent. In the first imagining in act 1, Biff asks Willy about his recent sales trip, ââ¬Å"Did you knock them dead, Pop?â⬠and Willy responds, ââ¬Å"Knocked ââ¬â¢em cold in Providence, slaughtered ââ¬â¢em in Bostonâ⬠(33); when he relates to Linda how another salesman at F. H. Stewarts insulted him, Willy claims he ââ¬Å"cracked him right across the faceâ⬠(37), the same physical threat that he will later make against Charley in act 2 on the day of the Ebbets Field game. Willy wants to box Charley, challenging him, ââ¬Å"Put up your hands. Goddam you, put up your handsâ⬠(68). Willy also says, ââ¬Å"Iââ¬â¢m gonna knock Howard for a loopâ⬠(74). Willy uses these violent physical terms against men he perceives as challengers and competitors. As with the tree metaphor, this one is sustained throughout the scenes with a plethora of boxing references: a punching bag is inscribed with Gene Tunneyââ¬â¢s name; Hap challenges Bernard to box; Willy explains to Linda that the boys gathered in the cellar obey Biff because, ââ¬Å"Well, thatââ¬â¢s the training, the trainingâ⬠; Biff feebly attempts to box with Uncle Ben; Bernard remarks to Willy that Biff ââ¬Å"never trained himself for anythingâ⬠(92); Charley cheers on his son with a ââ¬Å"Knock ââ¬â¢em dead, Bernardâ⬠(95) as Bernard leaves to argue a case in front of the Supreme Court; Willy, expressing to Bernard his frustration that Biff has done nothing with his life, says, ââ¬Å"Why did he lay down?â⬠(93). This last boxing reference, associated with taking a dive, is a remarkably imagistic way of describing how Biff initially cut down his life out of spite after discovering Willyââ¬â¢s infidelity. * * * Miller also uses images, symbols, and metaphors as central or unifying devices by employing repetition and recurrenceââ¬âone of the central tenets of so-called cluster criticism, which was pioneered in the 1930s and 1940s.6 In short, cluster criticism argues that the deliberate repetition of words, images, symbols, and metaphors contributes to the unity of the work just as significantly as do plot, character, and theme. These clusters of words can operate both literally and figuratively in a textââ¬âas I. A. Richards notes in The Philosophy of Rhetoricââ¬âand, therefore, contribute significantly to the overall aesthetic and thematic impact. For example, in Arthur Miller, Dramatist, Edward Murray traces word repetition in The Crucible, examining how Miller, ââ¬Å"in a very subtle manner, uses key words to knit together the texture of action and theme.â⬠He notes, for example, the recurrent use of the word ââ¬Å"softâ⬠in the text (64). My own previous work on T he Crucible has examined how the tenfold repetition of the word ââ¬Å"weightâ⬠supports one of the playââ¬â¢s crucial themes: how an individualââ¬â¢s struggle for truth often conflicts with society. Letââ¬â¢s examine an intriguing example of word repetition from Death of a Salesman.7 The words ââ¬Å"paintâ⬠and ââ¬Å"paintingâ⬠appear five significant times in the play. The first is a literal use: at the end of act 1, Willy tells Biff during their argument, ââ¬Å"If you get tired of hanging around tomorrow, paint the ceiling I put up in the living roomâ⬠(45). This line echoes Willyââ¬â¢s previous mockery of Charley for not knowing how to put up a ceiling: ââ¬Å"A man who canââ¬â¢t handle tools is not a manâ⬠(30). In both instances, Willy is asserting his superiority on the basis of his physical prowess, a point that is consistently emphasized in the play. The second time ââ¬Å"paintâ⬠appears is in act 2, when Biff and Hap abandon Willy in Frankââ¬â¢s Chop House to leave with Letta and Miss Forsythe. Hap says to Letta: ââ¬Å"No, thatââ¬â¢s not my father. Heââ¬â¢s just a guy. Come on, weââ¬â¢ll catch Biff, and honey weââ¬â¢re going to paint this town!â⬠(91). Of course in thisà line Miller uses the clichà © ââ¬Å"Paint the town redâ⬠for its well-known meaning of having a wild night of partying and dissolutionââ¬âalthough it is notable that Miller uses a truncated form of the phrase. Nevertheless, here the clichà © takes on new significance in the context of the play. Willy defines masculinity by painting a ceiling, but Hap defines it by painting the town with sexual debauchery and revelry, lording his physical superiority and his sexual conquests over other men. The third, fourth, and fifth repetitions occur in act 2 during the imagining in the hotel room when Biff discovers Willy with the woman. When the woman comes out of the bathroom, Willy says: ââ¬Å"Ahââ¬âyou better go back to your room. They must be finished painting by now. Theyââ¬â¢re painting her room so I let her take a shower hereâ⬠(119). When she leaves, Willy attempts to convince Biff that ââ¬Å"she lives down the hallââ¬âtheyââ¬â¢re painting. You donââ¬â¢t imagineââ¬ââ⬠(120). Here, painting is simultaneously literal and metaphorical because of its previous usage in the playââ¬âbut with a high degree of irony. Willyââ¬â¢s feeble explanation that Miss Francisââ¬â¢s room is literally being painted is a cover-up for the reality that Willy himself has painted the town in Boston. Biff discovers that Willyââ¬â¢s manhood is defined by sexual infidelityââ¬âultimately defining him as a ââ¬Å"phony little fake.â⬠* * * Another relatively unexplored aspect of Millerââ¬â¢s language is the names of his characters. Miller chooses his charactersââ¬â¢ names for their metaphorical associations in most of his dramatic canon. Justin Kaplan and Anne Bernaysââ¬â¢s 1997 text The Language of Names revived some interest in this technique, which is known as literary onomastics and is considered a somewhat minor part of contemporary literary criticism. Kaplan and Bernays examine the connotative value of names that function in texts as ââ¬Å"symbolic, metaphoric, or allegorical discourseâ⬠(175). Although some scholars have discussed the use of this technique in individual Miller plays, most readers familiar with the body of Millerââ¬â¢s work notice how consistently he chooses the names of his characters to create symbols, irony, and points of contrast. For example, readers and critics who are familiar only with Death of a Salesman among Millerââ¬â¢s works have long noted that Willyââ¬â¢s last name literally marks him as a ââ¬Å"low man,â⬠although Miller himself chuckled at the overemphasis placed on this pun. He actually derived the name from a movie he had seen, The Testament of Dr. Mabuse, in which a completely mad character at the end of the film screams, ââ¬Å"Lohman, Lohman, get me Lohmanâ⬠(Timebends 177-79). To Miller, the manââ¬â¢s cry signified the hysteria he wanted to create in his salesman, Willy Loman. Many critics also have noted the significance of the name of Dave ââ¬Å"Singleman,â⬠the eighty-year-old salesman who stands alone as Willyââ¬â¢s ideal. Despite Millerââ¬â¢s consistent downplaying in interviews of the significance of his charactersââ¬â¢ names, an examination of his technique reveals how extensively he connects his charactersââ¬â¢ names to the larger social issues at the core of every play. For example, the last name of All My Sonsââ¬â¢ Joe Keller, who manufactures faulty airplane parts and is indirectly responsible for the deaths of twenty-one pilots, resembles ââ¬Å"killer.â⬠In previous work on the play, I have noted the comparison of the Kellers to the Holy Family, and how, therefore, the names of Joe and his son, Chris, take on religious significance. Susan C. W. Abbotson has noted how the first name of The Ride Down Mt. Morganââ¬â¢s Lyman Felt suggests the lying he has lived out. She also has analyzed the similarities between Loman and Lyman, and has argued that Lyman is a kind of alter ego to Willy some forty years later. Frank Ardolino has also examined how Miller employs Egyptian mytholog y in naming and depicting Hap (ââ¬Å"Mythologicalâ⬠). An intriguing feature of Millerââ¬â¢s use of names is his repetition of the same name, or form of the same name, in his plays. It is striking how in Salesman Miller uses the name ââ¬Å"Frank,â⬠or variations of it, five times for five different characters, a highly unusual occurrence.8 In act 1, during Willyââ¬â¢s first imagining, when Linda complains to Biff that there is a cellar full of boys in the Loman house who do not know what to do with themselves, Frank is one of the boys whom Biff gets to clean up the furnace room. Not long after, at the end of the imagining, Frank is the name of the mechanic who fixes the carburetor of Willyââ¬â¢s Chevrolet. In act 2, in the moving scene in whichà Howard effectively fires Willy and Willy is left alone in the office, Willy cries out three times for ââ¬Å"Frank,â⬠apparently Howardââ¬â¢s father and the original owner of the company, who, Willy claims, asked Willy to ââ¬Å"nameâ⬠Howard. Willy also meets the bo ys in Frankââ¬â¢s Chop House and, in the crucial discovery scene in the Boston hotel room, Willy introduces the woman to Biff as Miss Francis, ââ¬Å"Frankâ⬠often being a nickname for Francis. There are significant figurative uses of ââ¬Å"Frankâ⬠too, for, although the word means ââ¬Å"honestâ⬠or ââ¬Å"candid,â⬠all of the Franks in Salesman are clearly associated with work that is not completely honest. Biff uses the boy Frank and his companions to clean the furnace room and hang up the washââ¬âchores that he should be doing himself. Willy somewhat questions the repair job that the mechanic Frank does on ââ¬Å"that goddam Chevrolet.â⬠Despite Willyââ¬â¢s idolizing of his boss, Frank Wagner, Linda indicates that Frank, perhaps, promised Willy a partnership as a member of the firm, a promise that kept Willy from joining Ben in Alaska and that was never made good on by either Frank or his son, Howard. Miss Francis promises to put Willy through to the buyers in exchange for stockings and her sexual favors, but it is uncertain whether she holds up her end of the deal, since Willy certainly has never been a ââ¬Å"hot-shotâ⬠salesman. And, of course, Frankââ¬â¢s Chop House is the place where Stanley tells Hap that the boss, presumably Frank, is going crazy over the ââ¬Å"leak in the cash register.â⬠Thus Miller clearly uses the name Frank with a high degree of irony, an important aspect of his use of figurative language in his canon. Of course, all this business dishonesty emphasizes how Salesman challenges the integrity of the American work ethic. Millerââ¬â¢s careful selection of names shows that he perhaps considered the names of his characters as part of each playââ¬â¢s network of figurative language. As Kaplan and Bernays note, ââ¬Å"Names of characters . . . convey what their creators may already know and feel about them and how they want their readers to respondâ⬠(174). Thus, in his choice of names, Arthur Miller may very well be manipulating his audience before the curtain rises, as they sit and read the cast of characters in their playbills. Finally, being aware of Millerââ¬â¢s use of poetic language is crucial forà however we encounter his playsââ¬âas readers who analyze drama as text or as audience members in tune with the sound of the dialogue. It is, indeed, ââ¬Å"all about the languageâ⬠ââ¬âthe language we read in the text and the language we hear on the stage. Notes 1. Although some critics have examined Millerââ¬â¢s colloquial prose, only a few have conducted studies of how poetic devices work in his dialogue. Leonard Moss, in his book-length study Arthur Miller, analyzes Millerââ¬â¢s language in a chapter on Death of a Salesman, a section of which is titled ââ¬Å"Verbal and Symbolic Technique.â⬠In an article titled ââ¬Å"Death of a Salesman and Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Search for Style,â⬠Arthur K. Oberg considers Millerââ¬â¢s struggle with establishing a dramatic idiom. Oberg judges that Miller ultimately ââ¬Å"arrives at something that approaches an American idiom to the extent that it exposes a colloquialism characterized by unusual image, spurious lyricism, and close-ended clichà ©Ã¢â¬ (305). He concludes that ââ¬Å"the playââ¬â¢s text, although far from `bad poetry,ââ¬â¢ tellingly moves toward the status of poetry without ever getting thereâ⬠(310-11). My 2002 work A Language Study of Arthur Millerâ⠬â¢s Plays: The Poetic in the Colloquial traces Millerââ¬â¢s consistent use of figurative language from All My Sons to Broken Glass. In other studies discussing individual plays, some critics have noted poetic nuances in Millerââ¬â¢s language. In ââ¬Å"Setting, Language, and the Force of Evil in The Crucible,â⬠Penelope Curtis maintains that the language of the play is marked by what she calls ââ¬Å"half-metaphorâ⬠(69), which Miller employs to suggest the playââ¬â¢s themes. In an article published in Notes on Contemporary Literature, John D. Engle explains the metaphor of law used by the lawyer Quentin in After the Fall. Lawrence Rosinger, in a brief Explicator article, traces the metaphors of royalty that appear in Death of a Salesman. 2. Thomas M. Tammaro also points out that the diminished prestige of language studies since the height of New Criticism may account for the lack of a sustained examination of imagery and symbolism in Millerââ¬â¢s work. Moreover, Tammaro notes that Millerââ¬â¢s plays were not subjected to New Critical theoryà even when language studies were prominent (10). In his new authorized biography Arthur Miller: 1915-1962, Christopher Bigsby clearly recognizes Millerââ¬â¢s attempts to write verse drama, but this work is largely a critical biography and cultural study, not a close textual analysis. 3. Most notable among these works are the following: ââ¬Å"The Family in Modern Drama,â⬠which first appeared in The Atlantic Monthly in 1956; ââ¬Å"On Social Plays,â⬠which appeared as the original introduction to the one-act edition of A View from the Bridge and A Memory of Two Mondays; the introduction to his 1957 Collected Plays; ââ¬Å"The American Writer: The American Theater,â⬠first published in the Michigan Quarterly Review in 1982; ââ¬Å"On Screenwriting and Language: Introduction to Everybody Wins,â⬠first published in 1990; his 1993 essay ââ¬Å"About Theatre Language,â⬠which first appeared as an afterword to the published edition of The Last Yankee; and his March 1999 Harperââ¬â¢s article ââ¬Å"On Broadway: Notes on the Past and Future of American Theater.â⬠4. For a more detailed discussion of these metaphors, see ââ¬Å"Death of a Salesman: Unlocking the Rhetoric of Poetic Powerâ⬠in my 2002 volume A Language Study of Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Plays. Also, in ââ¬Å"Figuring Our Past and Present in Wood: Wood Imagery in Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Death of a Salesman and The Crucible,â⬠Will Smith traces what he describes as a ââ¬Å"wood tropeâ⬠in the plays. 5. When Biff discovers Willy with the woman in the hotel room in act 2, she refers to herself as a football (119-20) to indicate her humiliating treatment by Willy and, perhaps, all men. 6. Frederick Charles Kolbe, Caroline F. E. Spurgeon, and Kenneth Burke pioneered much of this criticism. For example, Spurgeon did groundbreaking work in discovering the clothes imagery and the image of the babe in Macbeth. Kenneth Burke, in The Philosophy of Literary Form, examines Clifford Odetsââ¬â¢s Golden Boy as a play that uses language clusters, particularly the images of the ââ¬Å"prizefightâ⬠and the ââ¬Å"violin,â⬠that operate both literally and symbolically in the text (33-35). 7. In his work Arthur Miller, Leonard Moss details the frequent repetitions of words in the text, such as ââ¬Å"man,â⬠ââ¬Å"boy,â⬠and ââ¬Å"kid.â⬠He notes that forms of the verb ââ¬Å"makeâ⬠occur forty-five times in thirty-three different usages, ranging from Standard English to slang expressions, among them ââ¬Å"make mountains out of molehills,â⬠ââ¬Å"makin a hit,â⬠ââ¬Å"makin my future,â⬠ââ¬Å"make me laugh,â⬠and ââ¬Å"make a train.â⬠He also notes the nine-time repetition of ââ¬Å"make moneyâ⬠(48). Moss connects these expressions to Millerââ¬â¢s thematic intention: illustrating how the American work ethic dominates Willyââ¬â¢s life. 8. In ââ¬Å"`Iââ¬â¢m Not a Dime a Dozen! I Am Willy Loman!ââ¬â¢: The Significance of Names and Numbers in Death of a Salesman,â⬠Frank Ardolino takes a mainly psychological approach to the language of the play. He maintains that ââ¬Å"Millerââ¬â¢s system of onomastic and numerical images and echoes forms a complex network which delineates Willyââ¬â¢s insanity and its effects on his family and jobâ⬠(174). Ardolino explains that the name imagery reveals Biffââ¬â¢s and Willyââ¬â¢s failures. He sees the repetition of ââ¬Å"Frankâ⬠as part of Millerââ¬â¢s use of geographical, personal, and business names that often begin with B, F, P, or S. Thus the names beginning with F ââ¬Å"convey a conflict between benevolence and protection on the one hand and dismissal and degradation on the otherâ⬠(177). Benevolent Franks are Willyââ¬â¢s boss, the boy Frank who cleans up, and the repairman Frank. Degrading Franks are Miss Francis and Frankââ¬â¢s Chop House, which contains the literal and psychological toilet where Willy has his climactic imagining of the hotel room in Boston. Works Cited Abbotson, Susan C. W. ââ¬Å"From Loman to Lyman: The Salesman Forty Years On.â⬠ââ¬Å"The Salesman Has a Birthdayâ⬠: Essays Celebrating the Fiftieth Anniversary of Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"Death of a Salesman.â⬠Ed. Stephen A. Marino. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 2000. Ardolino, Frank. ââ¬Å"`Iââ¬â¢m Not a Dime a Dozen! I Am Willy Loman!ââ¬â¢: The Significance of Names and Numbers in Death of a Salesman.â⬠Journal of Evolutionary Psychology (August 2002): 174-84. ____________. ââ¬Å"The Mythological Significance of Happy in Death of a Salesman.â⬠The Arthur Miller Journal 4.1 (Spring 2009): 29-33. Bigsby, Christopher. Arthur Miller: A Critical Study. New York: Cambridge UP, 2005. ____________. Arthur Miller: 1915-1962. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2008. ____________. A Critical Introduction to Twentieth-Century American Drama, Volume Two: Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, Edward Albee. New York: Cambridge UP, 1984. ____________. ââ¬Å"Miller and Middle America.â⬠Keynote address, Eighth International Arthur Miller Society Conference, Nicolet College, Rhinelander, WI, 3 Oct. 2003. Brantley, Ben. ââ¬Å"A Dark New Production Illuminates Salesman.â⬠New York Times 3 Nov. 1998: E1. Burke, Kenneth. The Philosophy of Literary Form. 2d ed. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State UP, 1967. Couchman, Gordon W. ââ¬Å"Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Tragedy of Babbit.â⬠Educational Theatre Journal 7 (1955): 206-11. Curtis, Penelope. ââ¬Å"Setting, Language, and the Force of Evil in The Crucible.â⬠Twentieth Century Interpretations of ââ¬Å"The Crucible.â⬠Ed. John H. Ferres. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1972. Engle, John D. ââ¬Å"The Metaphor of Law in After the Fall.â⬠Notes on Contemporary Literature 9 (1979): 11-12. Gilman, Richard. ââ¬Å"Getting It Off His Chest, But Is It Art?â⬠Chicago Sun Book Week 8 Mar. 1964: 6, 13. Kaplan, Justin, and Anne Bernays. The Language of Names. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1997. Krutch, Joseph Wood. ââ¬Å"Drama.â⬠Nation 163 (1949): 283-84. Marino, Stephen. ââ¬Å"Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s `Weight of Truthââ¬â¢ in The Crucible.â⬠Modern Drama 38 (1995): 488-95. ____________. A Language Study of Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Plays: The Poetic in the Colloquial. New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 2002. ____________. ââ¬Å"Religious Language in Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s All My Sons.â⬠Journal of Imagism 3 (1998): 9-28. Miller, Arthur. ââ¬Å"About Theatre Language.â⬠The Last Yankee. New York: Penguin, 1993. ____________. ââ¬Å"The American Writer: The American Theater.â⬠The Theatre Essays of Arthur Miller. Ed. Robert A. Martin and Steven R. Centola. New York: Da Capo Press, 1996. ____________. ââ¬Å"Arthur Miller: An Interview.â⬠Interview with Olga Carlisle and Rose Styron. 1966. Conversations with Arthur Miller. Ed. Matthew C. Roudanà ©. Jackson: UP of Mississippi, 1987. 85-111. ____________. ââ¬Å"Death of a Salesmanâ⬠: Text and Criticism. Ed. Gerald Weales. New York: Penguin Books, 1967. ____________. ââ¬Å"The Family in Modern Drama.â⬠The Theatre Essays of Arthur Miller. Ed. Robert A. Martin. New York: Viking Press, 1978. ____________. ââ¬Å"Introduction to the Collected Plays.â⬠The Theatre Essays of Arthur Miller. Ed. Robert A. Martin. New York: Viking Press, 1978. ____________. ââ¬Å"On Broadway: Notes on the Past and Future of American Theater.â⬠Harperââ¬â¢s Mar. 1999: 37-47. ____________. ââ¬Å"On Screenwriting and Language: Introduction to Everybody Wins.â⬠The Theatre Essays of Arthur Miller. Ed. Robert A. Martin and Steven R. Centola. New York: Da Capo Press, 1996. ____________. ââ¬Å"On Social Plays.â⬠The Theatre Essays of Arthur Miller. Ed. Robert A. Martin. New York: Viking Press, 1978. ____________. Timebends: A Life. New York: Grove Press, 1987. Moss, Leonard. Arthur Miller. New Haven, CT: College and University Press, 1967. ____________. ââ¬Å"Arthur Miller and the Common Manââ¬â¢s Language.â⬠Modern Drama 7 (1964): 52-59. Murray, Edward. Arthur Miller, Dramatist. New York: Frederick Ungar, 1967. Oberg, Arthur K. ââ¬Å"Death of a Salesman and Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Search for Style.â⬠Criticism 9 (1967): 303-11. Otten, Terry. The Temptation of Innocence in the Dramas of Arthur Miller. Columbia: U of Missouri P, 2002. Richards, I. A. Richards on Rhetoric: I. A. Richardsââ¬âSelected Essays, 1929-1974. Ed. Ann E. Berthoff. New York: Oxford UP, 1991. Rosinger, Lawrence. ââ¬Å"Millerââ¬â¢s Death of a Salesman.â⬠Explicator 45.2 (Winter 1987): 55-56. Simon, John. ââ¬Å"Whose Paralysis Is It, Anyway?â⬠New York 9 May 1994. Smith, Will. ââ¬Å"Figuring Our Past and Present in Wood: Wood Imagery in Arthur Millerââ¬â¢s Death of a Salesman and The Crucible.â⬠Miller and Middle America: Essays on Arthur Miller and the American Experience. Ed. Paula T. Langteau. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 2007. Spurgeon, Caroline F. E. Leading Motives in the Imagery of Shakespeareââ¬â¢s Tragedies. 1930. New York: Haskell House, 1970. Tammaro, Thomas M. ââ¬Å"Introduction.â⬠Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams: Research Opportunities and Dissertation Abstracts. Ed. Tetsumaro Hayashi. Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1983. Teachout, Terry. ââ¬Å"Concurring with Arthur Miller.â⬠Commentary 127.6 (June 2009): 71-73.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.