Modernity plays a major role in the play Death of a Salesman written by Arthur Miller.

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Hussein Abi Nassif              

The Dangers of Modernity

Death of a salesman was published in 1949, and in the beginning of the 1950s, a decade of consumerism and new technological advances in America. Many inventions were specifically to the home, for example the TV and the washing machine became common household objects. The main character in the play is William Loman, an American salesman that is a deeply useless character, modernity accounts for the obsolescence of Willy Loman's career; traveling salesmen are rapidly becoming out-of-date, since in modern America new kinds of jobs and new technologies sell objects without using any salesmen. Significantly, Willy reaches for modern objects, the car and the gas heater, to assist him in his suicide attempts. Modernity plays a major role in the play “Death of a Salesman” written by Arthur Miller.

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William Loman the father of biff and happy Loman and the husband of Linda, is a man living on the edge of modern America, in the late 1940s. Willy is constantly trying to obtain the best things for his family, as technology and science are advancing, the business world advanced too. And it reached to a point were salesmen are no longer subjected to travel around and sell stuff, it is that from their offices using telephones and other means they are able to perform the same job of the former salesman job, that willy had. As more and more ...

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