Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Miller, Arthur - Frank Ardolino (essay date August 2002)
Miller, Arthur - Frank Ardolino (essay date August 2002)
Frank Ardolino (essay date August 2002)
SOURCE: Ardolino, Frank. “‘I'm Not a Dime a Dozen! I am Willy Loman!’: The Significance of Names and Numbers in Death of a Salesman.” Journal of Evolutionary Psychology (August 2002): 174-84.
[In the following essay, Ardolino evaluates the role that repeated patterns of letters, names, and numbers play in Death of a Salesman, arguing that Miller uses these patterns to “create an expressionistic juxtaposition of the past and present and desire and guilt in Willy's disordered mind.”]
In Death of a Salesman, Miller's poetic use of demotic English, the level of language which characters speak and which describes their actions and environment, creates the play's tragic dimension.1 To achieve the depths of tragedy, Miller expands the ordinarily limited expressive capabilities of demotic English by exploiting the sounds and multiple meanings of simple verbal,...
[The entire page is 5491 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- Lawrence Rosinger (essay date winter 1987)
- Leah Hadomi (essay date June 1988)
- Granger Babcock (essay date fall 1992)
- Steven R. Centola (essay date September 1993)
- John S. Shockley (essay date summer 1994)
- H. C. Phelps (essay date summer 1995)
- Robert A. Martin (essay date fall 1996)
- Frank Ardolino (essay date 1998)
- Jonathan Witt (essay date June 1998)
- Philip C. Kolin and others (essay date fall 1998)
- Brenda Murphy (essay date fall 1998)
- Brenda Murphy (essay date 1999)
- Terry Otten (essay date fall 1999)
- Fred Ribkoff (essay date spring 2000)
- Terry W. Thompson (essay date spring 2002)
- Frank Ardolino (essay date August 2002)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
