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117 Essays on Tragic Downfall Willy Loman. Documents 51 - 75

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Last update: September 5, 2014
  • Shakespeares Depiction of a Tragic Hero

    Shakespeares Depiction of a Tragic Hero

    Christopher Marlowe’s depiction of the tragic hero in both The Jew of Malta and Doctor Faustus displays protagonists that have a weakness which they give in to, and which ultimately leads them to their downfall. Faustus displays more human characteristics which the reader can relate to, Barabas being the more inhuman of the two, yet at their ends, the result is the same; the reader feels as though the right thing has been done, and

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    Essay Length: 712 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 8, 2010 By: Mikki
  • Faust as a Tragic Hero

    Faust as a Tragic Hero

    Faust as a Tragic Hero In the story of Faust, written by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Faust is whirled into an adventure of sin and deceit. The further Faust follows the devil the closer he comes to his own demise, taking down with him the innocent Gretchen. As Faust goes on he embodies the characteristics of a tragic hero in a sense that he is borderline good and evil, constantly battling his conscience. The one

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    Essay Length: 764 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 10, 2010 By: Bred
  • Willie Lynch Letter

    Willie Lynch Letter

    Willie Lynch The Sad Truth 294 years ago Willie Lynch of the infamous “Willie Lynch Letter: The Making Of A Slave” read his manual to those who were present that day in the Virginia Colony. In his letter Lynch spoke about how if his procedure is used correctly then “It will control the slaves for at least 300 hundred years”. As of right now the year is 2006 and the effects are still felt

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    Essay Length: 1,859 Words / 8 Pages
    Submitted: January 10, 2010 By: Mike
  • A Tragic Situation

    A Tragic Situation

    Tragedy is a description of an event that evokes a sympathetic feeling of emotion by the audience. The events involve people emotionally who were not involved in the situation physically. In the story of Antigone, Sophecles forces the audience to take pity on the poor girl’s situation. This story impacts the audience in such a way that the audience becomes emotionally enthralled in the plot of the story. All of Steiner’s, “Principle constants of conflict

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    Essay Length: 2,845 Words / 12 Pages
    Submitted: January 12, 2010 By: Kevin
  • A Doll’s House: Nora, Torvald and the Tragic Hero

    A Doll’s House: Nora, Torvald and the Tragic Hero

    A Doll’s House: Nora, Torvald and the Tragic Hero Henrik Ibsen’s play “A Doll’s House” features many characters, two of which are of great importance and have considerable difference among them. Nora Helmer and her husband Torvald live their lives in such a way that they are oblivious to their true desires and needs in life. Nora, the protagonist of the play, seems naпve and unknowledgeable of the world outside her home. Although she seems

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    Essay Length: 829 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 15, 2010 By: Mike
  • Jay Gatsby - a Tragic Hero

    Jay Gatsby - a Tragic Hero

    Jay Gatsby---A Tragic Hero What does the word пїЅпїЅheroпїЅпїЅ mean? Who can qualify as a hero? Heroes such as King Arthur may seem hard to understand and relate to, but there are many heroes in our everyday lives. Heroes are great people who have done special things; however, they are not perfect. Every hero has flaws; it is these flaws that make them humane but extraordinary. Happy endings are rare and unrealistic in the real

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    Essay Length: 361 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 16, 2010 By: Jessica
  • Okonkwo Is a Tragic Hero

    Okonkwo Is a Tragic Hero

    Okonkwo is the protagonist in the book Things Fall Apart by Chinua Achebe. Things Fall Apart is about Okonkwo rule by success and fuel by the absolute resentment of becoming like his father, Unoka. Okonkwo chooses to live life by creating fear and anger to his tribe and his family. Okonkwo is ruled by fear and anger, which takes part in his ultimate downfall. Okonkwo is not so much a martyr but a tragic

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    Essay Length: 857 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 17, 2010 By: Max
  • Tragic Flaw of Hamlet

    Tragic Flaw of Hamlet

    Tragic Flaw of Hamlet A tragic flaw is the excess of a particular weakness that affects how a character act and how he thinks, and eventually leads to his downfall. In Ў°HamletЎ± by William Shakespeare, the young prince is not able confront Claudius because the he has not been able to conquer himself in his internal conflict. This recalls the clichЁ¦, Ў°OneЎЇs greatest enemy is no other than oneself.Ў± HamletЎЇs angst becomes most evident when

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    Essay Length: 738 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 20, 2010 By: Tommy
  • America’s Tragic Flaw

    America’s Tragic Flaw

    America's tragic flaw “I can understand why he did not see me as American. He had a narrow but widely shared sense of the past- a history that has viewed American as European in ancestry (Takaki 2)” Americans today who do not have a racial background from European are seen as foreign. The English view is still around today and plays a major role in history about the white man's country. With the evidence in

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    Essay Length: 707 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 26, 2010 By: Stenly
  • What Is in a Tragic Hero?

    What Is in a Tragic Hero?

    A tragedy is a type of drama that is found in the first century B.C. The famous “Poetics”, that written by Aristotle, happens to Aristotle’s theories on tragedies. Due to Aristotle’s “Poetics”, a tragic hero has to be qualified for all of his four criterions. Most important of all, the character must be a great man (kings, princes, etc…). Secondly, that tragic hero must have a tragic flaw that brings to his downfall. Then, he

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    Essay Length: 826 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: January 26, 2010 By: Kevin
  • Who Is to Blame for Macbeth’s Downfall?

    Who Is to Blame for Macbeth’s Downfall?

    The play MACBETH is filled with suffering. It begins with reports of a bloody battle, an execution of a traitor and Macbeth’s bloodthirsty heroism as he “unseamed” one of the invaders “from the nave of the chaps”. In comparison MacBeth’s later actions are even worse as he commits violent crimes against his own people. Much of the suffering in the play is directly attributable to Macbeth. However, the central focus of the play is the

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    Essay Length: 635 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 27, 2010 By: Andrew
  • Discuss the Characters We Hear but Do Not See Why Are They Significant in Terms of the Themes of the Play and in Comparison with Willy?

    Discuss the Characters We Hear but Do Not See Why Are They Significant in Terms of the Themes of the Play and in Comparison with Willy?

    Discuss the characters we hear but do not see why are they significannot in terms of the themes of the play and in comparison with Willy? The first character that I would like to discuss but we never see is Willy’s father. Willy would have people believe that Willy’s dad was a great to success that he left a legacy to Willy a legacy of greatness. This cannot be so because Willy says in act

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    Essay Length: 439 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: January 31, 2010 By: Max
  • Macbeth: A Tragic Hero

    Macbeth: A Tragic Hero

    Tragedy occurs to some more often to others, but most define it differently. Webster’s Dictionary defines it as “a kind of drama in which some fatal or mournful event occurs” (764). To philosophers and traditional writers philosophy takes on another meaning. For example, to famous philosophical figure Aristotle, “tragedy occurs when noble or great persons are led, through pride or a secret flaw in their personalities, to suffering that changes their fortune. The tragic hero

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    Essay Length: 1,441 Words / 6 Pages
    Submitted: January 31, 2010 By: Wendy
  • Lady Macbeth's Downfall

    Lady Macbeth's Downfall

    Lady Macbeth is responsible for her own downfall due to her involvement with supernatural forces, her ambition and her guilty conscience. Lady Macbeth claims that she can “look like the innocent flower/But be the serpent under ’t” (1,5,64-65). She imagines that she has the capability to be remorseless and determined enough to do anything. Yet, she calls upon supernatural forces to use to her advantage. She does not ask for the help of the ‘dark

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    Essay Length: 665 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: January 31, 2010 By: Anna
  • Hamlet’s Tragic Flaw

    Hamlet’s Tragic Flaw

    Shakespeare's Hamlet is a play written to make the reader or director think for himself and create what he thinks to be Hamlets tragic flaw come alive. Any argument could be well supported or demolished on quotes and actions from the text and one's interpretation of these. The bottom line is not what is Hamlet's tragic flaw, but what tragic flaw can best be supported by the reader. Hamlet's tragic flaw is his inconsistent approach

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    Essay Length: 332 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 1, 2010 By: Mike
  • The Tragic Hero

    The Tragic Hero

    : The Tragic Hero : Literature entertains us and provides us with an escape from our everyday lives. In doing this we are introduced to many different kinds of heroes - the comedic hero, the romantic hero, the adventurous hero, and the tragic hero. However, it is the “Archetypal” tragic hero that is, by far, the most compelling hero we meet in literature. The tragic hero is usually of noble stature with a tragic flaw.

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    Essay Length: 1,132 Words / 5 Pages
    Submitted: February 3, 2010 By: Artur
  • Romeo and Juliet: A Tragic Confusion

    Romeo and Juliet: A Tragic Confusion

    Romeo and Juliet: A tragic confusion. “Feather of lead, bright smoke, cold fire, sick health, still-waking sleep, that is not what this is” (Shakespeare 1.1. 179-180). A string of contradictions explain the love story of Romeo and Juliet, a contradiction. Some critics consider this story a tragedy because Shakespeare once wrote; “the fault is not in our stars but in ourselves”. While others say it does not follow the standard Aristotelian form of tragedy (Krims

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    Essay Length: 683 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 3, 2010 By: Andrew
  • Macbeth...Tragic Hero?

    Macbeth...Tragic Hero?

    Macbeth is a butcher.” Discuss this statement exploring the ideas of Macbeth as a tragic hero and that the murder may or may not be entirely his fault. In your answer consider the role of the witches, Lady Macbeth, Macbeth’s indecision and his fatal flaw, ambition. You must support your answer with specific reference to and quotes from the play. The play, “Macbeth” by Shakespeare is entirely focused on the main character, Macbeth. In this

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    Essay Length: 995 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 9, 2010 By: Yan
  • Willie Lynch

    Willie Lynch

    WILLIE LYNCH The Making Of A Slave This speech was delivered by Willie Lynch on the bank of the James River in the colony of Virginia in 1712. Lynch was a British slave owner in the West Indies. He was invited to the colony of Virginia in 1712 to teach his methods to slave owners there. The term "lynching" is derived from his last name. Greetings "Gentlemen. I greet you here on the bank of

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    Essay Length: 669 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 15, 2010 By: July
  • The Downfall of Creon

    The Downfall of Creon

    The play Antigone by Sophocles shows a conflict between the King Creon and Antigone. This conflict eventually leads to the destruction of the house of Creon. Upon closer analysis, it is obvious that Creon caused this to happen himself. There is an old saying that power corrupts and Creon has fallen victim to power. In the opening of the play, we learn that Creon has been proclaimed king. We expect Creon to be the same

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    Essay Length: 605 Words / 3 Pages
    Submitted: February 18, 2010 By: Mike
  • Macbeth Causes His Own Downfall

    Macbeth Causes His Own Downfall

    In the story, Macbeth is ultimately responsible for the actions that lead to his fate .It could be argued that Macbeth is not totally to blame for his own destruction, allowing himself to be influenced by others. First, Macbeth ignores the voice of his own mind. He knows what he is doing is wrong even before he murders Duncan, but he allows Lady Macbeth and greed to cloud his judgment. Secondly, Macbeth willingly listens to

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    Essay Length: 974 Words / 4 Pages
    Submitted: February 19, 2010 By: Tasha
  • Phoniness Was Holden’s Downfall

    Phoniness Was Holden’s Downfall

    Phoniness was Holden’s Downfall Holden Caulfield sees life and the entire world as a struggle between the artificial things and those that are authentic. His main pasttime is to detect phoniness in other people’s lives and to harshly critisize it, as well. And, although he loves the purity and innocence that childhood brings with it, and hates the artificiality of the adult world, he is, troughout the story of “The Catcher in the Rye“, gradually

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    Essay Length: 1,659 Words / 7 Pages
    Submitted: February 20, 2010 By: Tommy
  • The History of the Remote Control - the Downfall of Western Civilization???

    The History of the Remote Control - the Downfall of Western Civilization???

    The History of the Remote Control: The Downfall of Western Civilization??? By: Kyle History of Technology Research Paper The typical American family has on average four remote controls in their household. Look around the room and count how many you have in your house. I count five in just this room alone, not including the wireless mouse and keyboard I am using right now to type this paper. Everyone has seen remote controls for televisions,

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    Essay Length: 2,468 Words / 10 Pages
    Submitted: February 20, 2010 By: Jessica
  • Affirmative Action and Its Downfalls

    Affirmative Action and Its Downfalls

    Affirmative action today is considered to be one of the most controversial dilemmas facing our equal status of individual rights. As we all know, affirmative action was implemented with the idea and hope that America would finally become truly equal. So far, it has lasted for thirty years and has failed to solve any of our current problems concerning equal rights. Affirmative action was created with the intention of using reverse discrimination to solve the

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    Essay Length: 459 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 24, 2010 By: Venidikt
  • Tragic Myrtle

    Tragic Myrtle

    In The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald is able to use precise diction and textual evidence in chapter 2 to bring to life the figure of Myrtle Wilson. Myrtle is portrayed as a disappointed tragic figure ; a person who is materialistic and uses objects to show herself and others that she is cape able of being what she pleases. The author uses his dexterous ordain of diction to select particular words to emphasize the

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    Essay Length: 429 Words / 2 Pages
    Submitted: February 25, 2010 By: Victor

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