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    The book “The Great Gatsby” was written in 1925 by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The story is recognized as one of the greatest representations of the Roaring Twenties in literary fiction despite its sales when first published. There are many reasons for why it is held at such a high standard. Reasons such as how the American Dream is represented in the story or the way each character develops throughout the story. The Roaring Twenties was an era full of money‚ crime‚ greed‚ ambition‚ rebellion‚ and excess

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    Selina Weng Honors English III Mrs. Maggert 14 April 2017 The Corruption of American Dream American dream was rooted in the words that each person‚ despite their origins‚ is capable of succeeding in life and this was all based on their skills and efforts. Fitzgerald shows the original American dream as a set of objectives that entailed settlement‚ freedom‚ and an honest life with the likelihood of upward social and economic mobility established through hard work‚ as corrupted and characterized

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    Fitzgerald’s novel‚ The Great Gatsby. The Great Gatsby is about the American Society at its worst and the downfall of those who attempt to reach its illusionary goals. The idea is that through wealth and power‚ one can acquire happiness. To get his happiness Jay Gatsby must reach into the past and relive an old dream. In order to achieve his dream‚ he must have wealth and power. Fitzgerald was wrong in the way he presented Gatsby’s American Society because of the way Gatsby made money‚ found love

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    Fitzgerald was demonstrating the views and values of the time in regards to the American Dream in the 1920s through characters in particular such as Nick and Gatsby who contrast. Nick and Gatsby are similar in the fact that they both have the desires/goals to live out the perfect life being the American dream. But where they differ is the way in which they live out their aspirations. Nick’s moral sense sets him apart from Gatsby who is consumed in the idea of the perfect life with Daisy. He builds up to

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    hard work‚ drive and passion‚ it’s possible to achieve the American Dream.” - Tommy Hilfiger. Or is it? The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald illustrates the final years of the life of a hopeless romantic‚ Jay Gatsby‚ and his unrequited love for Daisy Buchanan‚ an already married young woman with a beautiful little girl. Gatsby longs to be with Daisy‚ only to realize that it is not at all possible. Gatsby’s ideal dream and Daisy’s American-Dream-like qualities are very different‚ yet so similar

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    The American Dream is defined as someone starting low on the economic or social level and working hard towards wealth. The dream represents that people no matter who they are can become successful in their life for their own work. The American Dream can either become a reality or it can die out. In the Great Gatsby characters were corrupted by wealth and materialism that it affect their dream. Jay Gatz or Gatsby did not come from a wealthy family he worked for Dan Cody and got his money. Gatsby’s

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    Contextual Study: The Great Gatsby & American Beauty 1. Comparison provides insight into the evolution that American culture has undergone throughout the 20th century 2. Jazz Age: era of great hope for the future‚ as end of WW1 set up expectations in people’s minds that the future would be bright for everyone 3. decade of economic prosperity‚ with wealth a desired goal‚ as money thought to bring happiness and social & financial success 4. underlying the hope was a sense of

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    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Social Commentary on the American Dream The 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” (Dictionary.com). The Great Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ is not just a story about the rich and privileged. It comments on the social divides between the old and new rich while speaking about a disillusioned America. Fitzgerald’s characters

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    books become very popular they are often turned into a movie. Movie producers can predict by the success of book sales if a movie is worth creating. Readers spend their money on books to commit time into reading it‚ similarly to a movie audience. The movie audience spends their money on the ticket to watch the movie. Readers are likely to spend the money and time to watch a movie if they have read the book. I agree with the statement that movie-audience relationship has more in common with that of

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    Great Gatsby: Fitzgerald’s Criticism of The American Dream The American Dream‚ as it arose in the Colonial period and developed in the nineteenth century‚ was based on the assumption that each person‚ no matter what his origins‚ could succeed in life on the sole basis of his or her own skill and effort. The dream was embodied in the ideal of the self-made man‚ just as it was embodied in Fitzgerald’s own family by his grandfather‚ P. F. McQuillan. Fitzgerald’s novel takes its place among other

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