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    Adam Brown American Dream

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    an american dream. He was a great dad to his kids and an awesome husband to his wife. The story about Adam Brown is one you’ll never forget. Adam had an eventful life‚ he was just a small kid with a big dream‚ an american dream. When Adam entered the room it just lit up. Adam was a small boy‚ but that didn’t stop him from playing sports. His love was football. His size did not matter his heart was bigger than everything. Adam was a key player for the Lake Hamilton Wolves. Adam had big dreams he

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    The American Dream [Name of the Writer] [Name of the Institution] The American Dream Introduction The American dream can be defined as equality of opportunity and freedom that allows all U.S. residents reach their goals in life only with their effort and determination. Today‚ this idea first expressed in 1931 by James Truslow Adams‚ refers to that prosperity depends on your skills and your work‚ and not in a rigid social hierarchy‚ although the meaning of the phrase has changed throughout

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    hope The American Dream is a naïve belief; it lies in the ideas of unlimited opportunity‚ impractical levels of success‚ and a perfect life. This Dream is particularly alluring for the poor‚ and immigrants fleeing oppression. It speaks of freedom and opportunity‚ a land full of unimaginable possibilities and endless wonder. From early colonists who left Europe as peasants and outcasts to seek land and wealth‚ to present day illegal immigrants hoping for a better life‚ the American Dream has drawn

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    Why do people really come to the United States for? Many say it’s for the American dream but what is the American dream in reality? Why do some people even risk their life’s to come to the United States in order to obtain the American dream? For many people the American dream is the only hope that they have for a better future but not just for themselves but for their family as well. The American dream for many is the idea of having better opportunities of prosperity and success in this country.

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    Fitzgerald and the “American Dream” To some the American Dream is freedom‚ to others the American Dream is wealth and popularity. According to F. Scott Fitzgerald the American Dream was unattainable. In The Great Gatsby‚ Fitzgerald gives us a glimpse into the life of the high class during the twenties through the eyes of Nick Carraway‚ the narrator of the novel. The American Dream has become a superficial environment in which people do not understand what is reality and what is fiction. The

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    Robinson‚ “The American Dream‚ the idea of the happy ending‚ is an avoidance of responsibility and commitment” (http://www.brainyquote.com). What Robinson is saying is that a lot of people expect to achieve the American Dream‚ i.e. happiness‚ through the accumulation of external things‚ meanwhile avoiding the true origins of happiness‚ which are internal. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s‚ The Great Gatsby‚ Jay Gatsby’s character also faces this dilemma as he reaches for the American Dream‚ believing that

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    Society’s Influence on the American Dream "Do as most do‚ and men will speak well of thee." [Thomas Fuller (1654-1734):Gnomologia] Men have a dream to improve their lives and better their social status but each man does not realize that he pursues this dream in hopes of pleasing others and not for his own well being. Fuller’s quotation demonstrates that people find success and social mobility if they act and do what others want them to do. The American dream of success and happiness can not be

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    to achieve personal fulfillment‚ and overall be successful; the basis of the American Dream. Regardless of where you are born or what class you’re in‚ you have the possibility of moving upward. Both native-born Americans and American immigrants pursue and can achieve the American dream. Now‚ many think that the American dream has died‚ or is progressively dying as time goes on. Even still‚ for some the American dream is still very much real‚ and very much a goal for them. These people are the poor

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    Jasmine Bartlett February 25‚2013 TR 9:30-10:50 COMP2 Professor A. Westbrook The Reality of the American Dream The American Dream is a national philosophy of the United States‚ a set of ideals in which freedom includes the opportunity for prosperity and success‚ and an upward social mobility achieved through hard work. In the definition of the American Dream by James Truslow Adams in 1931 he stated “life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone‚ with opportunity for each

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    characters and their individual American Dreams. The novel took place in the 1920s‚ post-World War I‚ where American pride‚ wealth‚ luxuries‚ and all other superficialities were glorified. During this time‚ the American people became ambitious‚ and economic success was made their main goal. The notion of “money can buy happiness” was prominent and people of all walks of life believed in it. While this may have seemed like a positive outlook‚ it resulted in Americans becoming “a restless‚ dissatisfied

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