2007. In many works of literature, past events can affect, positively or negatively, the present activities, attitudes, or values of a character. Choose a novel or play in which a character must contend with some aspect of the past, either personal or societal. Then write an essay in which you show how the character's relationship to the past contributes to the meaning of the work as a whole.
The longevity of human memory is bittersweet; nostalgic memories of the past can bring great pleasure, while terrible experiences can haunt one forever. In Death of a Salesman, Willy Loman must deal with the ramifications of his extramarital affair. Willy's struggle with his past mistake is a vehicle through which Miller explores Willy's role in Biff's failure to succeed and the fallacy of Willy's ideas regarding success, revealing his criticisms of the society responsible for creating Willy.
Miller makes it clear that the discovery of Willy's extramarital affair by Biff is the direct cause of Biff's failure in life, however, Willy refuses to accept his responsibility. Bernard notes that after Biff visits Willy in Boston, the drive that Biff had to complete high school vanishes, a comment that angers Willy greatly and that he denies. Biff's discovery of Willy's affair exposes his father as a "fake", and leads him to see through the fallacy of the ideals and dreams that his father has for him. This leads to his disillusionment and feeling of loss that haunts him in the years following the incident. Willy blames Biff's laziness for his failures in life, but deep down, Willy recognizes that he is to blame. Willy recognizes, beneath his surface pomp and pride, that his ideals and dreams truly are fake.
Willy is Miller's symbol for the American way and the products of American society, and exposing Willy's life as a lie displays Miller's criticism of them. Biff's attitude towards life stems from Willy's constant preaching of his ideas on success, under the pretense that he is indeed a successful man. However, after Biff's discovery of his affair with The Woman, Willy can no longer deny the fact that his way of life and aspirations are lies, a fact that causes him to be as utterly lost as Biff is. He turns to memories of his brother, Ben, for the "right answer" to the question of how to succeed in the world, yet finds no concrete answer. This question haunts Willy, until eventually he resorts to the only option that he feels will redeem himself to his family and the world for his failures:death.
Willy is haunted by the questions and self-realization of the fake life that he leads, after Biff discovers his affair. Miller exposes the fallacy of the American way by exposing its product, Willy, as a lie.