For decades people have had American Dreams they dedicate their lives‚ giving it their all for the goals that they have set up for themselves. However‚ while seeming to be a good motivating factor for Americans‚ most of the time these dreams are unsuccessful or unattainable for the people that work so hard toward them. Since there is more often failure in achieving an American Dream‚ many people have negative opinions toward the concept itself. The best description of this ideology is reflected by
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The American Dream is the idea of the “desired” happy life that everybody wants to achieve: having money‚ a big house‚ and a perfect family. The book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about how to upper class fails to achieve their American Dreams. The main character‚ Nick Carraway‚ narrates the story‚ telling the reader how he perceives the upper class as being hollow. Fitzgerald uses Gatsby’s life to symbolize the overarching theme of the failure to grasp the American Dream‚ which results
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In Francis Scott Fitzgerald’s Novel the Great Gatsby he uses several different characters to show that the American dream is not attainable no matter how hard you work or how successful you are in life. The Novel includes characters who are rich and poor ones that came from money and ones that did not and no matter how rich they were they always wanted something else. The characters all want the one thing they don’t have or can’t have whether it be items you can purchase with money or not. Before
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In his novel The Great Gatsby‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald makes it quite clear how he feels about American society‚ especially the American dream. He criticizes the American dream’s credo that anyone‚ if they work hard enough‚ can become who they want to be. More importantly‚ he attacks the idea that American society can be free of a class system. The reality is much more grim. Through the characters of Myrtle‚ Gatsby‚ Tom‚ and Daisy‚ Fitzgerald exposes how the American dream is a polluted and corrupted
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Although F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays various themes throughout The Great Gatsby the most prevalent theme is the decline of the American dream in the 1920’s‚ or as he calls it the “jazz age.” The American Dream is the idea that any person despite however adverse their background may be can become successful through hard work. During this time period that the movie is set in World War 1 has recently ended which caused the stock market to flourish and the ban on alcohol to lead to a booming underground
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The failure of the American dream The American dream is an ideology which characterized America at the start of the twentieth century. It was the idea that everybody should reach success without regarding their social status. The dream was based on America’s declaration of independence which said that “all men are created equal”. This means that everybody should have the possibility to get rich and people should earn thanks to their ability to do things and not because of their name.
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Romantic Dream "If love is only a will to possess‚ it is not love" (Thich Nhat Hanh). This caveat relates to the social and moral decay of the 1920’s. During this era‚ every American had one objective to achieve -- success. Francis Scott Fitzgerald‚ the author of The Great Gatsby‚ presents a realistic image of American life in the 1920’s. The characters in his novel‚ like many people in that period‚ only care for money. Becoming rich is their definition of success‚ and is their main objective
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The American Dream has a different meaning for all who believe in it‚ but at its core is the idea of personal elevation. Jay Gatsby in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby seems to have experienced the loftiest possible version of the American Dream by rapidly rising from destitution to opulence‚ but he sees his life as yet unsatisfactory because it lacks the love and companionship of Daisy‚ who is as much a part of Gatsby’s American Dream as wealth. Willy Loman‚ the protagonist of Arthur
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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s book‚ The Great Gatsby‚ and his short story called The Jelly Bean both give readers an insight to what the 1920’s were about and how times have drastically changed. Fitzgerald utilizes the effects of symbolism‚ irony and foreshadowing through both works to help him get his points across to the readers. The works that Fitzgerald has written showcase the “American Dream” and how wealth and class influence everyone’s decisions and attitudes. By using foreshadowing‚ irony and symbolism
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A False Dream F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel‚ The Great Gatsby‚ is rife with controversial characters and ideas‚ but none more so than that of the flawed “American Dream.” Americans have always felt they can cling to the idea of the American dream‚ exploiting even the most infinitesimal sliver of hope in search of a life of fulfillment and contentedness. The poor look to the rich and powerful as symbols of the American dream coming to fruition; proof that baseless clay can be molded into something
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