The American Dream In The Great Gatsby Essay

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    what comes to mind when you hear the phrase ‘American Dream.’ For others, this dream carries heavier implications; a good education and hard work seem like the only pathway to success and wealth for those who hold or are held to higher standards. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s comparison of Jay Gatsby’s dreams and the American Dream in The Great Gatsby paints a picture of lust, greed, and eventual and inevitable failure for the reader. My idea of the American Dream may be different than other people’s,…

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    The American Dream The Great Gatsby has frequent representation of themes and symbols; however the greatest theme is the corruption of the American dream. The American dream is an illusion of an idea that you can start from the bottom, and become something great. People who had a big house, fancy car, and lots of money were perceived to be a symbol of the American dream. This dream caused corruption and destructiveness throughout many American lives. Myrtle, Gatsby, and Daisy have all been…

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    known as The American Dream is the most important theme in The Great Gatsby because it breeds corruption, bitterness, and destruction. The American Dream has been corrupted over the years by an appetite for financial gain. People have tried to find ways around working hard for their money so they could “get rich quick,” and this is exactly what the main character in The Great Gatsby does. In order to achieve his version of The American Dream (winning his former lover Daisy back) Gatsby acts…

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    The Great Gatsby Essay The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and was first published on April 10, 1925. Was written in the Jazz Era, the Jazz Era was parties, social drinking, flapper girls, bootlegging and wealthy people. The main character Jay Gatsby had the mansions, money, girls, parties but he didn’t have it all. He fell in love with the beautiful Daisy Buchanan, who was gorgeous and loved to have fun but there was one problem, she was married to Tom Buchanan. Tom was proud…

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    The Great American Dream can be found in all aspects of F.Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby.” This belief that everyone can achieve happiness and success with hard work, regardless of where anyone comes from or is born, pertains to each character, with each striving or failing with varying degrees of success and consequence. The character’s of “The Great Gatsby” are placed within different roles among society in order to demonstrate the pursuit of this dream. Within the novel, Fitzgerald…

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    State of American Dream By definition is the ideal American Dream is the ideal that every US citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work, determination and initiative. Although this is the definition this is very untrue of current american citizens. Many people are born in different situations and define success as something different. The American Dream is not attainable because of the continuous vicious cycle, not everyone is born with the…

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    “You cannot give up on the American dream. We cannot allow our fears and our disappointments to lead us into silence and into inaction” (Marco Rubio/Republican Debate/Greenville, South Carolina). Marco was not always in the spotlight for the republican GOP but bears his roots from an impoverished family in Florida. Marco Rubio’s father, a Cuban immigrant, washed dishes and struggled to conceive money when he started to chase the American dream. Nevertheless He relentlessly strived to become a…

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    The American dream exists as a driving force in the daily lives of the characters in The Great Gatsby. From the most important, Nick, to the least important, Jordan, each person gains access to their dream by being born into, marrying into, or befriending those in the sought after lifestyle of glamour in the 1920s. Everyone has their own version of the American dream, and in The Great Gatsby, the pursuit of this dream either enhances the character’s life, or leads to their demise. In the 1920s…

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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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    “Roaring Twenties,” Americans thought nothing could go wrong they were at the height of being wealthy. The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald took place during this time era, and displays the habits of wealthy. Also, “The American Dream” is the ideal that every United States citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work and determination which is the exact opposite of what happens in the book. the novel The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott…

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