Friday, May 31, 2019
A Comparison of the Dream in Death of a Salesman, Ellis Island, and Ame
The Dream in  expiration of a Salesman, Ellis Island, and America and I    The American  moon is as  varied as the people who populate America. The play The Death of a Salesman by  Arthur Miller, the poem Ellis Island by Joseph Bruchac, and the poem America  and I by Anzia Yezierska illustrate different perspectives of the American  dream. All three authors show some lines of thought on what the freedom inherent  in the American dream means. The authors clarify distinct ideas on the means to  achieving the American dream. The authors also elucidate some different goals  striven for in the dream for a better life. Diverse ideas on how freedom plays  into the American dream, what actions are needed to achieve the American dream,  and the goals of that dream are explained in the works of the three authors.  The portion of American culture that makes the American dream possible is  that of freedom of opportunity and self-determination. Opportunity in America  means that people have a cha   nce of making a  honorable lives for themselves with  proper guidance and strong wills. The character Willy Loman in The Death of a  Salesman showed his faith in American opportunity when he thought of his brother  Ben  expression such comments as, Opportunity is tremendous in Alaska, William.  Surprised youre not up there (Miller 45). Because Willy passed up  opportunities, he felt that he had failed the American dream. In Ellis Island,  the  loudspeaker system portrays opportunity as the chance to do honest work and get  rewarded for it. This idea is shown in the lines, Dreams Waiting for those  whod worked a thousand years yet  neer owned their own(Bruchac l. 11-13).  Similarly, the poem America and I expressed the freedom of opportunity as a...  ...or wrong. Different pictures of the  American dream are displayed through The Death of a Salesman by Arthur Miller,  Ellis Island by Joseph Bruchac, and America and I by Anzia Yezierska.  Although the dreams may vary in substance, the   y are all rooted in American  freedom, land, and desires.    plant Cited  Literature for Composition Essays, Fiction, Poetry, and Drama ed. Sylvan  Barnet, Longman 2000  Bruchac, Joseph. Ellis Island, Sylvan Barnet, Literature for  Composition   Miller, Arthur. Death of a Salesman. New York Penguin, 1949.    Yezierska, Anzia. America and I. The Open Cage An Anzia Yezierska  Collection. Ed. Alice  Kessler-Harris. New York genus Persea Books, 1979. Rpt. in The Heath Anthology of  American  Literature. Ed. Paul Lauter et al. 4 ed. Vol. 2. Boston Houghton Mifflin,  2002.                     
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.