The Great Gatsby American Dream Essay

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    During the 1920s, the desire to achieve the American Dream was great, as the country was prosperous and people received more opportunities. It was the anticipation that through hard work and initiative one can attain true success. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald illustrates a different aspect of the American Dream, as it has become more materialistic. The protagonist, Jay Gatsby demonstrates the death of the American Dream, as it becomes an obsession, object oriented and without…

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    The American Dream is a devil in disguise. While many see the American Dream as an opportunity to a better, more fulfilling life, it misleadingly entices those who pursue it. Individuals who try to follow his/her own American Dream usually face disappointment after being misled by the false facade it presents. The United States is understand to be a place that offers space and freedom to succeed for those desperate to escape their miserably disappointing reality. However, our perceived…

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    The theme of the American dream plays a major role in The Great Gatsby. In the novel, the American dream ends in tragedy and death and old money prevails without guilt. Old money is represented by Tom and Daisy, who both survive and move away after Gatsby is killed. Myrtle and Wilson,who were poor, die at the end. Jay Gatsby’s misguided illusion of the American dream and Daisy led to his death. Gatsby, who represented new money is killed by Wilson. However, Tom and Daisy don’t love each other…

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    Gatsby and the American Dream Watching The Great Gatsby, it may seem that the movie is about a love affair between a couple of the main characters, Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan. But in reality the movie is far more than just a romance. It’s more about how the culture of the 1920s affected the American Dream. The movie is set in New York, in the 1920s, when Wall Street was booming and the ban on alcohol was backfiring. People were able to show more skin when it came to how they dressed, and…

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    achieve the American Dream was great, as the country was prosperous and people received more opportunities. Nicknamed the ‘roaring twenties’, this decade was a time when many people defied prohibition, indulged in new styles of dancing, dressing, and rejected many traditional moral standards. The American Dream is the anticipation that through hard work and initiative one can attain true success. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald illustrates a different aspect of the American Dream, as it…

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    The American Dream Everyone has their different way of describing the american dream. Some want to have a nice house, car, and a family. While others want to live their lives to their lives to the extreme by wanting to be famous, rich, and have lots of fun. For example The Great Gatsby’s american dream was like the ones of today to the extreme bigger houses more expensive cars big parties. He wanted the more the bigger the better. He was also known for his huge parties. The Great Gatsby…

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    What is an American Dream? Does American dream represent having good life or improving individual’s social, economic and political status? American writer and historian, James Truslow Adams, defines the American dream as “…dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement” (The Balance). He went on say that American Dream is not “… a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of social…

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    “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that's no matter—to-morrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther… So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past” (Fitzgerald 180). In other words Gatsby, who believed in the dream, reached towards that ideal that would always be just out of reach, but that does not matter for tomorrow he will stretch out just a little farther, row a…

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    come home to find that she had married a rich man while he was gone. Hearing this, you may feel bad for this man, but Jay Gatsby reinvented himself to be a man that he believed his love, Daisy Buchannan, would love in return. However, this wasn’t the first time Jay Gatsby had reinvented himself in a better image. To quote "The Great Gatsby", chapter 6, "The truth was that Jay Gatsby, of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself. He was a son of God-a phrase which, if…

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    In The Great Gatsby a considerable subject is the quest of the American Dream. Numerous topics are symbolized in this novel, yet the most typical one identifies with the modification of the American Dream. The American Dream is characterized as somebody beginning low on the shared or money related level, and working towards achievement and/or riches and notoriety. To comprehend Gatsby's optimal long for going through his existence with Daisy, Gatsby gets his millions in a fake (in view of lying…

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