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    Mills 'The Promise'

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    life examples and Mills ‘The Promise’ (Mills‚ 1959) this will assist in creating this distinction‚ and will be used to help resolve the predicament of whether people still feel trapped in the twenty-first century in the same way that Mills described in the mid-twentieth century. Personal Troubles • Leading sentence/ Definition o Personal troubles are daily complications experienced daily by an individual‚ acting as a source of stress and difficulty in one’s life. Mills describes troubles

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    The Miserable Mill

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    Brittany Adelhardt Book Report: The Miserable Mill 10/24/10 Junior English‚ B3 The Miserable Mill The story of The Miserable Mill‚ is the sequence novel to Series Of Unfortunate Events By Lemony Snicket. It is the story about the Baudelaires’ three misfortuanant children who have been moving to different family membors and now what would be the Lucky Smells Lumbermill‚ there "new" home. While traveling with Mr.Poe‚ they see a building in the shape of an eye. When the Bauldelaires’ arrive at

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    The Great Gatsby’s American Dream Corrupption “There are those‚ I know‚ who will reply that the liberation of humanity‚ the freedom of man and. mind‚ is nothing but a dream. They are right. It is. It is the American Dream.” (Archibald MacLeish). This quote talks about how the American Dream is only a dream. The American is a life of personal happiness and material comfort‚ and is traditionally sought by the individuals in the U.S. It is only a fantasy. Author F. Scott Fitzgerald shows a great example

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    such as money‚ cars‚ jewelry‚ a big house with a lakeside view. The American dream. It is as present as it is today as it was 100 years ago. For some it is attainable. For others it can never be reached. For some they have come so close but yet it is still far away. Although many people in The Great Gatsby strive to reach the American Dream nobody truly reaches it. Jay Gatsby is a perfect example in The Great Gatsby of the American dream. He grew up in a penniless family and always dreamed of becoming

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    American dream – part 1(history) * Many people from England fled to the New World during the late 1500s and early 1600s in pursuit of their American dream. Their country was in a state of economic‚ political‚ and religious tumult‚ and they saw great potential in the New World. So they came to the America to start a new life‚ and create their perfect society. These immigrants fled from oppressive societies. Religious turmoil in England was surely the main cause for the immigration. Furthermore

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    The Great Gatsby: Corruption of the American Dream Historian James Truslow Adams says that “the American Dream is that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for every man‚ with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately‚ and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely‚ but a dream of social order

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    story that comments on American Ideals. The story is very Ironic because Gatsby lives the life that every American dreams of having‚ except for love. This book was written as a satire that comments on American ideals in the 1920’s. In “The Great Gatsby” there are two themes. One is “the American Dream is unattainable because of the desire to be rich” and the other is “the search for the American Dream is more enjoyable than attaining it.” Those themes are how it is clear the Great Gatsby is a satire

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    False? The “American Dream”‚ defined as a perfect job‚ family life‚ social status‚ house‚ and many other things; is it all true‚ or is it an impossible lie? Through two unique uses of character and plot‚ Fitzgerald in “The Great Gatsby and Dunning in Want To Fly‚ these two authors show two different yews points of the “American Dream”. Even though The Great Gatsby lacks character development‚ the enriched plot makes up for it. N the book its shows that the pursuit of the “American Dream” is better

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    Nathaniel Danquah Mrs. Mukerjee American Literature: Period #6 4/19/13 The Great Gatsby and the American Dream As defined by many Americans themselves‚ the American Dream interpreted as having financial security and prosperity. It is having it promises self-fulfillment as a reward for hard work and self-reliance. However‚ it can still be interpreted in different ways. In my personal opinion‚ The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald only depicts the corruption of Dream. Fitzgerald shows this

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    The Great Concept of American Freedom Early America was a place for anyone to live their life the way that they wanted‚ as it is now‚ but back then this was a new concept. Much of this idea comes from the freedoms obtained by living here. Many other countries in the world had many freedoms‚ but not as numerous as they were in America shortly after the country was founded. Americans during the late 1700’s and early 1800’s embraced their freedoms and became leaders and expanders‚ and what we now consider

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