This research aims to : (1) To explain the reader understand the extrinsic elements of The Sandbox drama. They did not care about mommy until mommypun died. Then mommy took grandma to a place and put her in a sandbox where I interpreted this as the last time for grandmother's care and that was very tragic, like waiting for grandmother to die so they could live in peace. He put my grandmother under the kitchen and only had a thin blanket and used potluck utensils. But the child that grandmother hoped didn't care about him. Where in the short story the 85-year-old grandmother who had been left by her husband and after the death of her husband the grandmother fought alone to support her child `namely mommys. This research is entitled An Analysis of Ten Symbol of Grandma's Death As Reflected In The Edward Albee Sandbox. At the point when the receptive youngster finally kicked the bucket, his sibling on the opposite part of the bargain encountered a religious passing: his heart all of a sudden wound up numb, he was as though torn from his body, and from that point forward he can't love, feel empathy or some other emotions. At that point the guardians did not falter to assuage him (directly in the soul of "dark amusingness"), they put out his eyes, tore out his hands, hauled out his tongue. When they had embraced a kid - his twin sibling - and he began hollering with great swears. Yet, surprisingly his entry in their home uncovers the mystery that the bosses kept for their entire lives. So the Young Man gets the wealthy Mommy and Daddy with the main aim of getting cash, regardless of how however much as could be expected. He appears the American dream even with an attractive, yet a rationally mangled Young Man, without the capacity to cherish, accept, trust, however, is prepared to do anything for cash. In the play, Albee obliterates the picture of his incredible nation.
Tragically, the fantasy of Edward Albee in the play composed by him in 1960 ended up being very a long way from this thought. The "American dream" is known to be the model of opportunity, an indication of America's exceptional destiny, where one and all can welcome himself and get what he merits.