The American Dream In The Great Gatsby Essay

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    In the American novel The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, it is shown that in the 1920s the values of the American Dream has completely changed. The American Dream is defined as being a national aspiration that every citizen has the freedom and equal opportunity to achieve prosperity, wealth, and happiness (Emin Tunc). Jay Gatsby, the protagonist, has entirely modified the standards of what it is like to live the American Dream and how to live it. Instead of working exceedingly…

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    The American Dream is an ideal of having equal opportunities to achieve success and prosperity through one 's hardwork. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Nick, the protagonist tries to pursue his own dreams, hoping to succeed in the ideals of the American Dream. Throughout the story, as more and more people enter Nick 's life, he realizes that the American Dream is simply an unrealistic idea, created to corrupt those trying to achieve it. In The Great Gatsby, the American Dream ruined…

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    In 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald published his third book titled The Great Gatsby. As the greatest achievement of his writing career, this novel, set in the summer of 1922, gives a critical insight into the ‘Roaring Twenties,’ exploring the wealth of the upper class, the jazz music of the parties, and the underlying corruption that began to decay every aspect of life. The story primarily focuses on the young millionaire Jay Gatsby, who’s only known by the ostentatious parties that illuminate his…

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    The theme of the corruption of the American Dream in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, is the greed in his characters lives. This may be used to show how corrupted the American Dream gets when people let it consume them. This can explicitly be seen through the characters: Jay Gatsby and Myrtle Wilson. In the novel, Myrtle Wilson is an extraordinary example of a character that has shown the corruption of the American Dream because she views the American Dream as greed and money. According…

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    The American Dream; the ideal that every US citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work, determination, and initiative. Unfortunately, back in the 1920’s this ideal remained but a mere dream for anyone trying to work their way up from rags to riches for the simple reason that it was practically impossible to become rich unless you were already born into it. In the novel “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald we get an up close and personal idea…

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    The Great Gatsby: A Pursuit for the ‘American Dream’ In spite of the innumerable calamities, from the naval blockade of vessels to hinder the ingression of contraband to alcohol distilleries, situated in esoteric locations across the nation, concurring with the adversities endured by the vagrants, who lived amid the secluded, “valley of ashes,” – (Fitzgerald, 23) a land which epitomized the ‘social and moral decay of humanly ethics’. However, “For every item that carries the darkness of…

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    Death of an Illusion We've all had a dream and strived for them, but the reality is cruel and there is a threshold always hindering it all. The protagonist of the book--Gatsby until his death was deeply in love with Daisy. A lot of people think he is sad, because he pursued a dream with nothing. But he needed a reality, a Daisy, a love he thought he had suspended. But it seems to be one of the real and virtual, Daisy is real, and Gatsby's pursuit of love dream is as elusive as he is a person of…

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    's The Great Gatsby tells the story of the class conflict, social status, and the pursuit of the American Dream in the 1920 's America era. The American Dream is the belief that every American should have the opportunity to achieve success and prosperity and to live a fulfilled and happy life through hard work, honesty, moral integrity, determination, and initiative. In the Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald presents the characters Daisy Buchanan, Myrtle Wilson, and Jay Gatsby all following the dream of…

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    The American Dream The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a tragic love story but is also a clear representation of the American dream. Most characters in the novel wanted wealth, fame, and success and would do anything in their power to get this. What they did not realize was that money could not buy them happiness. Throughout the novel, Fitzgerald shows how relationships are broken, and dreams are eventually ruined by the harsh reality of life. Fitzgerald does a great job representing…

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    The American Dream was originally about the discovery of happiness and equality. However, In the novel “The Great Gatsby”, Fitzgerald manages to illustrate how this dream became perverted into a desire for wealth and the belief that money is the key to happiness. For many, the prospect of achieving the “American Dream” became a moral vacuum and led to recklessness, selfishness and destruction. Fitzgerald uses symbols and motifs including decadent parties, the valley of the Ashes, the Eyes of T.J…

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