The Great Gatsby American Dream Essay

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    happy family symbolize the American Dream. The novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald expresses many themes. However the most significant one relates to the corruption of the American dream. Money can buy everything except true love. In The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby envisions of having the American Dream with a wedded woman and tries to attract her with his wealth. All the characters deceive each other, leading to tragic endings. In the novel The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby is in love with…

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    Benjamin Franklin, Mary Antin, and F. Scott Fitzgerald each present the reader with different accounts of The American Dream. The American Dream is the idea that everyone can succeed through hard work, ambition, and determination. Franklin and Antin talk about the American Dream from personal experience while Fitzgerald writes about what he thinks the American Dream of the 1920s is like. In The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin, he talks about how anyone can be successful through hard work and…

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    The American Dream is a dream, an achievement people want to win and have. As years passed, people realized the American Dream is just that, a dream nothing more. People worked hard hourless days and in the end they stay in the same position. But not all gave up on believing and tried to win their own dream and see if they could achieve it. And some did achieve, but others, they just did not have the luck or chance to achieve their American Dream. In The Great Gatsby, the American Dream is one…

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    distance between American reality and the American dream” - Bruce Springsteen. American life is something presented to the eye in many different shapes and forms. One popular image is the idea of the American Dream. This dream is that any man or women, no matter who they are, can become successful in the work force of the United States. F. Scott Fitzgerald demonstrates this conflict between the American dream and American reality through characters in the novel The Great Gatsby. From the…

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    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a novel that shows what happened to the American Dream in the 1920’s. The 1920’s was the time period in where people became which is a time period when the dreams became corrupted for many reasons. The American dream not only causes corruption but caused destruction. Myrtle, Gatsby and Daisy have all been corrupted and destroyed by the dream.Fitzgerald shows us the American dream while using every character in some way. Most of the characters either…

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    Compare and contrast the importance of dreams and The American Dream in your two novels The American Dream could be seen as the foundation of America. The desire to reinvent oneself whilst gaining wealth, prosperity and success has always been paramount to America, especially during the roaring twenties when that dream had seemed to become a reality for many. The American Dream was very instilled in Dutch sailors who came to America hopeful of attaining a fresh, better start, just like Scott and…

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    The American Dream is to be able to make life better than where the person is emigrating. To change the path their past life lead to, the American Dream became the opportunity for everyone to make a new life for himself or herself by having the chance to get a job. Fitzgerald views the American dream as something that is long gone and long since forgotten. He defines it as a dream that was just that, a dream. In the Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby was the epiphany of a failed American dream. He wanted…

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    There is a vast difference between the American Dream and the reality of living in the U.S.; in which having money does not always lead to happiness. In F.Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby the American Dream is seen as an ambition for many and nothing to others. It seems that during the 1920s anybody and everybody wanted to achieve the American Dream. Americans felt that having money was the only way to be happy. For George Wilson and Jay Gatsby, that was the ultimate goal; to be rich,…

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    Hypothesis: Fitzgerald, through Gatsby’s life, demonstrates an unrealistic idealism of the American Dream In the novel ‘The Great Gatsby’ F.Scott Fitzgerald forms a criticism of the illusion society has formed of the American Dream. Gatsby himself is a metaphor of this illusion, he forms deceptive lies about his life in order to create his own impression of reality. Illuded by his idea of Daisy, he builds his whole life around the idealisation he has formed of her. Gatsby’s failure to…

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    The American Dream and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby go hand in hand with each other correlating one thing to another and depicting it for an audience. Having a dream and actually pursuing it is something that people have a hard understanding. For years, people worldwide have built up the American Dream as the ultimate lifestyle and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s display of his character Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby, contradicts this belief. The American dream is believed to be…

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