The Great Gatsby American Dream Essay

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    Savannah Rosenberg Period 3 English 3-4 Great Gatsby Theme Analysis When you first think about the Great Gatsby, you think about the great love triangle happening between Daisy, Tom, and Gatsby. But once you go deeper into the book you understand the alternate motifs. In the book “The Great Gatsby” by Scott Fitzgerald it is clear that the theme is the American dream. The American dream is defined as someone who starts in the lower class and works their way up to wealth and prosperity. Having…

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    judging the distance between American reality and the American Dream” (Bruce Springteen). The American dream states that anyone can achieve their dreams no matter their race, gender or social status. In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, fighting for the American dream is the biggest source for Jay Gatsby’s sadness and despair. Chasing after a dream that is unattainable only causes pain and ultimately results in destruction. Throughout the story, Gatsby craves Daisy Buchannan’s…

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    Twenties, the immense dream many people had was to have a great amount of money, live in an extravagant home, and drive a nice car. A handful of the characters in the novel tried so hard to achieve the American Dream, but failed at it. One of the main causes for failure is as simple as being unhappy. There are many reasons why each individual struggles to find happiness, whether it is with how they look or what they want but cannot have, but in the end it will not really matter. Jay Gatsby, a…

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    In Great Gatsby, all of the characters are left to contend with the past especially Mr. Gatsby himself who has a particularly intriguing past. In terms of Gatsby’s past, all remains a mystery but one simple fact : Gatsby may be filthy rich now, but has not always been. Gatsby's so-called overnight success leads the aristocrats of East Egg to believe Mr. Gatsby was involved in crimes like “bootlegging” in order to attain such money. Whether or not Gatsby was explicitly involved in crime, the…

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    In the passage presented from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald presents the ditsy but bright Daisy and the naïve but ambitious Gatsby as an unlikely pair, mutually falling to destruction from their own superficial infatuation with each other. Gatsby’s counterfeit wealth and façade of leisurely composure aide in bringing out Daisy’s shallow love for Gatsby. In illuminating this contrast between the two characters, Fitzgerald utilizes weather imagery as well as the symbolism of…

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    Great Gatsby Recklessness

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    Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby. Unrecognized at the time, the book floundered. However, nearly a century later, the book has risen to be one of the greatest literary works of all time. Looking back in the 1920’s, Fitzgerald did a marvelous job depicting the lust of wealth and recklessness of the era. In…

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    and none of them care about you at all? In the Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway moves to New York and meets up with his cousin Daisy and her husband Tom. Shortly after his arrival, he was invited to a party next door by a man named Jay Gatsby. Gatsby was a young business man who had a giant house, fast cars, and a lot of money. Nick and Gatsby spent a lot of time with each other and eventually, Nick called Daisy over to his house so that her and Gatsby could reconnect (they hadn’t seen each other…

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    Corrupted American Dream The American dream is defined as the goal of a hard, honest worker, as they successfully fulfil their wants. Cars, clothes, big houses, and family is ideal to the dream, but in The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald interprets the corruption of the American Dream; although many characters from the novel seem to be successful, those characters are immorally feeding their wealth and success towards parties, alcoholism, and materialism. The corruption of the dream is…

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    In the book The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby represents the corruption of the American dream within the 1920s. He represents this in three different ways. The first of which being his rags to riches story about Dan and how Gatsby inherited vast amounts of money, upon which he loses to Dan’s ex wife. The second being his illegal means of getting money and becoming rich on his own. And the third being his death, and the fact that he killed Myrtle. Gatsby starts off with…

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    Gatsby is a troubled soul. Constantly tormented by the thirst for something; more wealth, love, image, etc. Nothing is ever enough, and that ends up costing him gravely in the end. Authors use intertwined events to create a theme, thus creating a bigger underlying message for the reader. Throughout The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald uses many themes in the duration of his book. Two of his main themes are the corruption of the American dream and people’s undeniable hope. He critiques the…

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