"The american dream in the 1920s" Essays and Research Papers

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    economical success dominated over Americans‚ and caused amorality over the society. At that time‚ people pursued cheap pleasure and full of entertainments: parties‚ extravagance‚ and dissipation. The Great Gatsby describes that the Jazz Age through the protagonist‚ Jay Gatsby‚ who was in the lower class‚ struggles with Tom Buchanan and with George Wilson to gain power for achieving his ex-lover‚ Daisy—who is the reason that he yearns for power and symbolizes the American Dream: Equality. Fitzgerald criticized

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    The American dream is to achieve greatness; to make greatness from nothing. Fitzgerald knows this dream and how it can lead to destruction. He explores this in his book The Great Gatsby. His characters build masks to try to project their ideas into reality‚ but their dreams pull them too far from the real world and lead to their downfall. Tom‚ Myrtle and Gatsby construct masks to reach their dreams but these fantasies drag to a breakdown. Myrtle wilson changed everything. Her goal was to wedge herself

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    Scott Fitzgerald’s‚ The Great Gatsby‚ reflects the 1920’s American dream by conveying a sense of despair to the aspirations for love and wealth‚ and the downfall of weakness. These perceived desires give a sense of hope and motivation to achieve them; however‚ these dreams are so far that they seem to be inaccessible‚ leading to the downfall of weakness. F. Scott Fitzgerald successfully deceives the reader into believing that the American dream is achievable through Gatsby’s attempts to convey his

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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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    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 crumble;

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    anything to live the American Dream .People will journey far and wide‚ traverse the entire continent‚ suffer all manner of pain and suffering‚ if they believe that‚ in the end‚ they will be rewarded‚ and there is nothing quite like survival to motivate people. The ancient tale of “The American Dream” has been pursued by many‚ but only few make it all the way. The novel The Great Gatsby‚ by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ and the two poems‚ “Dream Deferred”‚ by Langston Hughes‚ and “American Dream of Reality”‚ by

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    Hamada. A Hamada Writing Lab Mr. Michael 25/11/13 The American Dream The American Dream limns an apotheosis of optimism and faith that glisters a beam of light onward to the contentment of human aspirations and desires. The “American Dream” was quantified by James Truslow Adams and that these needs were vented in Thomas Jefferson ’s Declaration of Independence in 1776‚ where it was avowed: “We hold these truths to be self-evident‚ that all men are created equal‚ that they are endowed by their

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    Pursuit of the American Dream What is the American Dream and how does one obtain it? That question can be answered in a multitude of ways. For some achieving the American Dream means living a better‚ richer and happier life. Others believe it has more emphasis on just living simply and having a fulfilling life; also having the opportunity to become anything one desires with little determination and hard work. In Watson’s Bread and Roses: Mills‚ Migrants‚ and the Struggle for the American Dream‚ immigrants

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    believe that almost everyone should look themselves like that. I grew up in a very american way‚ in fact the idea of being an American was almost forced on me. Yet both of my parents are not full blood Americans. My father was not even born in this country! However it was crucial to my parents that I would be raised like everybody else around me that my lifestyle would embody the characteristics of what exactly the American way of life was about. I was raised on the idea that hard work is the number one

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    The American Dream started in the early days when poor immigrants were first coming to America and looking for opportunities. The Declaration of Independence states that “all man are created equal and that they are endowed with certain unalienable rights‚ among which are life‚ liberty and pursuit of happiness” (“The American Dream”‚ n.d.‚ para. 1). In the 1920’s‚ The American Dream used to be searching for equality. Now everyone is trying to just get as rich as they can. This is one of the many

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