| Death of a Salesman, Life of a Housewife |
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| In Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman", the main character Willy Loman has plenty of issues to deal with. I wondered what the play would have been like from his wife's, Linda Loman's, perspective. What was she dealing with throughout the play, and throughout her marriage for that matter? Outwardly, she seemed eager to please him and wanted to be the perfect wife, attempting to keep the balance between Willy's hallucinations and the quality of family life at home. It seems she has more hidden beneath the surface of her feelings about her husband's problems and her own. Was she trying to keep it together, or was she in her own dillusional world herself? | ||||||||||||||||
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