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    dream." -Bruce Springsteen. F. Scott Fitzgerald even brilliantly combines the golden age and bible teachings to portray this message that, the American Dream of getting rich is far from the reality of how people actually get rich, in his novel The Great Gatsby. But Unfortunately as the story goes on, we begin to see that F. Scott Fitzgerald commits blasphemy and compares one of his deceitful characters to Jesus Christ, a man who never sinned. The American Dream changed Gatsby because Gatsby…

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    "Tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms father. . . . And one fine morning--So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past." The last line of F. Scott Fitzgerald 's infamous The Great Gatsby. The main reason as to why he wrote such a novel was to create a consciously artistic achievement of something that was beautiful and simple, yet intricately patterned. What is really intriguing is why Fitzgerald used Nick as the narrator, or the amount of symbolism…

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    The big change in the United States government really happened during the Great Depression when the New Deal was introduced by Franklin Roosevelt. After World War 2 the Federal Government stayed with New Deal ideas and kept expanding its size, with social programs and military power. Democrats felt as the government could be used for good and that social programs such as welfare, were the government’s job. Republicans felt as though it wasn’t the government’s job to provide social programs for…

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    Jay Gatsby: The Manipulator of Reality The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1925, is the story of Jay Gatsby and his inexorable desire to achieve the status and dreams he has coveted throughout his life. The dream of profound wealth in the 1920’s is represented through Gatsby’s road from destitution to extreme wealth and social stability at the time many admired those who had it and those who were impoverished desired to achieve it themselves. Gatsby is willing to change his…

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    was enduring the biggest financial crisis in its history after the Wall Street crash in 1929 which caused the Great Depression of the 1930s. Unemployment was hovering around twenty percent and as Long points out the income gap between most Americans and the rich of the country was extremely high. With his speech, Long tries to point out this income gap to the American…

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    The Female Characters in The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is a historical novel. The author employs a narrator, Nick Carraway, to allow insight into the upper class society of New York during the early 1920s. Socially, women enjoyed enormous changes during this era as hemlines shortened replacing long skirts and corsets, hair was bobbed to resemble a more masculine style, and women attained the right to vote. Women, predictably, responded in a variety of ways to these…

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    With the Great Gatsby, the common view of the American dream is achieved through many of the main characters in the story. One of its important factors to the relation, is the valley of ashes. ‘A fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and…

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    Power of Determination In his novel, The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck illustrates the struggle between the working class and the upper class through the discrimination between the migrants and the landowners. Landowners maintain control through violence; they treat migrant workers without humanity. Migrant families, often referred as “Okies,” are starving, while food is wasted by the wealthy. In the novel, many migrants lose their homes, jobs and life savings, forcing them to move and leave…

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    strength of the body and keeping its control. This technique was in efforts to develop and maintain flexibility in the spine and hips, specifically in a seated position. “Lamentation” was created in response to the grief, sorrow and anger during the Great Depression. This piece was simplistic but spoke so much through the use of her body and facial expressions. The video features an interview Graham had in 1976, following the “Lamentation” performed by Peggy Lyman.…

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    The Great Depression officially started on October 29, 1929 after the stock market crash, and the Great Recession started in 2008 after the government pushed buying houses onto people. The Great Depression and Great Recession has almost seven decades between them, so some people would never think they would be similar. They might even say the President has learned from the Great Depression, so the economy will never get like that again. The economy almost did in the Great Recession. When…

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