While many would say that he wasn’t old enough to know better when he stole as a teenager, not even Biff can come up with an excuse for stealing a suit in Kansas City as a grown man. Throughout the book Biff steals a suit, football, and a pen because it is his passive-aggressive way of getting back at people he feels have unfairly done better in life than he has, but also because stealing gives him an excuse to quit whatever bad job he happens to be in that moment. As a result, now Biff’s tendency to steal, constantly stands in the way of his path to a job. Everytime something goes wrong, Biff now thinks that stealing is a way out of it. The items that Biff stole represent how Willy Loman had never thought his son Biff that stealing was not okay and that being well liked is not an excuse for such thing as stealing. Even though Biff stole while he was a teenager and was not old enough to know better, he can’t come up with an excuse for stealing a suit in Kansas City as a grown man. Biff also feels as though the world owes him something, so when the people around him do not give him what he’s owed, he steals from them to punish them in a passive aggressive manner. He was taught that it was okay to steal as long as success comes from the stealing. Biff steals because from a young age, Biff was not taught the difference between right and wrong or illusion versus reality. “I know who I am, kid.Death of a Salesman, written by Arthur Miller portrays Biff as a main character in the play who tried to work at many different jobs, and failed at each one due to the fact that he stole. However, he shows a great deal of personality development and eventually understands himself and his abilities, coming out of his confusion. He is initially confused, dissatisfied and perceives himself as a failure. However, he displays courage and a determination to stay true to himself and his reality despite his family’s tendency towards falsehood and self-deception. Thus, Biff is a character who is far from perfect and has a lot of flaws. Instead, Willy overwhelmed and unable to bear the truth is driven to commit suicide. However, Biff’s attempt to bring Willy down to earth proves to be futile, as Willy is far too delusional to accept the reality. He soon bursts into tears of frustration and desperation, and pleads to his father, “Will you please let me go, for Christ’s sake? Will you take that phony dream and burn it before something happens?” “The man ain’t know who we are! The man is gonna know.” Biff tells the family that they “never told the truth for ten minutes in this house”. Biff confronts his father about the rubber pipe and his suicide attempts and tries to open his eyes to reality. He decides to tell the truth to his father, instead of sugarcoating it with lies and self-deceit, but his father refuses to accept his reality. However, when he meets Oliver, Biff realizes that he was only a shipping clerk to him, and never a salesman.”And then he gave me one look and- I realized what a ridiculous lie my whole life has been.” He is made to believe, by his father, that Oliver “thought the world” of him, and that he worked as a salesman to him. “Sure, we’d be known all over the counties!” exclaims Biff as he discusses his plan of building a ranch with his brother.īiff soon decides to visit Bill Oliver, his former employer, to try to get a job for himself to support his parents. He is thus conflicted between choosing an occupation of his interest and choosing one that receives the approval of his father and also earns him an income.Īlthough Biff seems to understand himself and his family better than others, often he too falls victim to Willy’s habit of altering reality, and gets carried away with Happy’s magnificent, unrealistic ideas, and also contributes to them. Biff exhibits a strong inclination towards jobs that require manual labor and shows disinterest towards desk jobs. His relations with his father are strained, partly due to his knowledge about Willy’s extra-marital affair, and partly due to Willy’s discontent and disapproval with his son’s life choices. “Not finding yourself at the age of thirty-four is a disgrace.” He is unemployed and is mocked by his father for him. He is unsuccessful in his life, and thus dissatisfied with it. However, this incident snaps him out of the illusionary world in which the whole Loman family is living, and thus Biff eventually comes to be the only one who understands, as well as makes an effort towards bringing his father and the others out of their façade.Ī man of thirty-four, Biff now “bears a worn air and seems less self-assured”. His trust in his father suffers a great blow, and along with this, his confidence in himself is also destroyed.
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