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    Native Americans living in Southwest America in the seventeenth century came to see many changes in their society. Freedom for many Native people would be the right to practice their own religion‚ and keep up their traditions. When it came to land‚ power‚ or wealth‚ the Native people shared this among each other and had a structured way of living before European and Spanish arrival to their homeland. The Spanish craved wealth and land‚ and took over Southwest America making it like a prison to most

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    The American Dream is the idea that anyone who comes to America can achieve wealth through hard work. In the Epic of America‚ Adams stated that the American Dream is a social order where every man and woman would be able to progress without the chains of their past interfering. The Great Gatsby is a negative review of the American Dream. It shows that anyone can make money‚ but not everyone will find happiness through wealth. The Great Gatsby took place during a very rough time in American history

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    The American Dream: Revisited The American dream is different for every individual. This dream is an image of success that drives people to their own pursuit of happiness. It gives a chance for the underdogs to rise and let their dreams become a reality. The American dream has changed over the years. From having freedom of success to being better off than your parents were. People have a vest veracity of what their American dreams is. Whether it is love‚ a certain job title‚ or money the common

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    The Great Depression and World War II left an imaginable and remarkable mark on America’s history and its citizens. Through these trying times‚ some Americans were able to unite‚ come together‚ support one another and try their best to live the best standard of life they could‚ while other americans become more divided and began to turn against each other. During the Great Depression and World War II‚ some American’s became more unified through things such as FDR’s New Deal‚ the Bonus Army March

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    The Death of the American Dream in the Great Gatsby World War I brought out the deepest‚ darkest‚ most malignant tendencies of human nature. Young men died in the thousands on the battlefield‚ martyrs of a wanton cause. 1920’s American society mirrored the Great War’s atmosphere of excess. The newly wealthy class‚ in onslaught‚ threw lavish parties and indulged in sexual promiscuity as exorbitance became the new state religion. Traditional values‚ including that of the American Dream‚ seemed to

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    The Sea In The Awakening

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    When reading the novel from a psychoanalytic perspective‚ the sea plays an important role in the ’awakening’ of Edna Pontellier. There is a strong relationship between Edna and the sea from the beginning of the novel to the end. The sea represents Edna’s desire to find her own freedom and identity. In the beginning of the novel‚ Edna’s expression of the sea reflects her awareness of her own identity. "Her glance wandered from his face away toward the Gulf‚ whose sonorous murmur reached her like

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    States in search for new opportunities. Although many of these immigrants did meet new opportunities‚ their arrival caused cultural tensions within American society to increase. As the number of immigrants increased‚ so did the cultural tensions between the American society and the American Indians‚ as well the cultural tensions between the American society and the Japanese immigrants. To begin with‚ the new immigrants came to the United States in search for new opportunities. Many came in search for

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    describes the harm of "white privilege" on American society. By its very definition privilege is a grace bestowed on one over another (Webster‚ 2006). In that sense‚ privilege is in and of itself an opposition to equality. In racial terms‚ if one group has been historically privileged over another‚ there will never be equality between the groups until a catastrophic new beginning can occur removing all trace of the bestowed privilege. White American privilege is the result of a country developing

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    The Effect of the Jungle on American Society By: Evan Mastroianni The Effect of the Jungle on American Society What is a novel? For some it is simply a throw-away piece of material that is only meant to satisfy the individual for a brief moment. It is something that a person preforms to simply kill time and holds know true value to the individual other than filling the allotted ?reading time? on the person?s calendar. For others‚ it is so much more than simply instant

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    The American Dream After World War I‚ America seemed to guarantee unlimited financial and social opportunities for anyone willing to work hard – the American Dream. For some‚ however‚ striving for and realizing that dream corrupted them‚ as they acquired wealth only to seek pleasure. Even though the characters in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby appear to adore the freedom of the 1920s‚ their lives reveal the decline of happiness that results when wealth and pleasure swallow them. Specifically

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