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    The American dream is when one individual makes his own success. The individual may want to be socially or financially better than another one’s current state or condition (Eskow). Each person has the right to their own individual dream of success. In the book‚ The Great Gatsby by F.Scott Fitzgerald‚ there is a character named Gatsby that followed his own American dream by trying to get reunited with a girl named Daisy‚ but gets himself killed at the end of the novel. Gatsby is a fictional example

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    The Great Gatsby The American Dream for men in the 1920’s was to get rich and make a lot of money how ever they can no matter what. For women an American Dream was to do men’s work and have equal rights between men and women’s working and living conditions. Only for some people in different social classes were their dreams attained. F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby so he can show society that an American Dream is what people make of it and their not always achievable. James Gatz’s

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    America dreamed of attaining financial greatness. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is set in New York City‚ the epitome of industrialization and economic opportunity during the Jazz Age. The young‚ charming‚ and charismatic Jay Gatsby flaunts his financial prosperity through lavish and colorful parties. However‚ Gatsby’s money is earned dishonestly and is short lived. Fitzgerald reveals the intangibility of the American Dream through various characters in the novel. George Wilson embodies the underprivileged

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    American Dream is everybody’s greatest aspiration. The American Dream is the belief that each individual can‚ through hard work and strength of mind‚ achieve everything they desire. However‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ in his novel The Great Gatsby‚ chose to portray the American Dream not as the wonderful thing most people believe it is‚ but as corrupt and not real. All of Fitzgerald’s characters in his novel strove throughout the book to achieve their version of what they believed the American Dream to be

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    it could change someone’s life or kill them. F. Scott Fitzgerald had created both Winter Dreams and The Great Gatsby. The two stories are quite similar ‚but also very unique in their own way. Gatsby and Dexter both come from either poor or middle class families. The two just want to fit into the higher class and both of them needed the last piece to becoming apart of the higher class. The location Gatsby and Dexter live impacted their lives and as well did the people that lived around them‚ also

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    13‚ 2012 Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby and The American Dream America is commonly known as a place where opportunities are fairly unlimited to everyone. A shared goal among American society is the attainment of wealth‚ freedom‚ and prosperity. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby leads his reader on a winding‚ dangerous journey in order to describe a failed attempt to achieve the American Dream in a corrupt 1920’s society. Daisy Buchanan‚ Tom Buchanan‚ and Jay Gatsby are three characters that

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    The Great Gatsby The idea that Gatsby is the embodiment of the American Dream is the dominant portrayal of his character in the novel because his desire of procuring Daisy is the main goal in his life and he has the ability the distort the truth of his identity. For instance‚ attaining Daisy’s affection means everything to Gatsby. Nick’s first sighting of Gatsby is at the end of the first chapter‚ where Gatsby stands with his arms stretched out longingly toward the green light at the end of Daisy’s

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    sense of these examples from novels such as The Great Gatsby and Bodega Dreams. During the early 1920’s‚ The Great Gatsby takes place in Long Island‚ New York where the community mostly consist of rich white people. Then there’s Bodega Dreams which sets in the 1990’s in Spanish Harlem‚ New York where the community would mostly consist of latinos/latinas. The two novels present us with examples of how race can impact our society. In Bodega Dreams‚ students in Spanish Harlem are stereotyped by the

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    Fitzgerald’s theme in The Great Gatsby is the corruption and decline of the ‘American Dream’. By analyzing the upper class during the 1920s through the eyes of the narrator‚ Nick Carraway‚ Fitzgerald shows that the American Dream has transformed from noble thoughts to more materialistic and money based ideas. Fitzgerald also highlights the original aspects as well as the new aspects of the American Dream in his tragic novel to illustrate that a once impervious dream is now lost forever to the American

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald’s masterpiece The Great Gatsby‚ narrator Nick Carraway effectively sums up the motivating force that drives the novel’s titular character‚ Jay Gatsby. It is the achievement of the American Dream that hangs – unreached – at the end of Carraway’s sentence. In this way‚ the story leaves us with a similar lasting taste of longing‚ the bittersweet realization that powerful as the Dream may be‚ it is just that: a dream. And yet‚ while the Dream‚ like the sentence – is never fully realized

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