"The great gatsby the american dream reality vs appearance" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Great Gatsby‚ a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ introduces us to the narrator‚ Nick Carraway‚ who tells the story of how he became a friend of a mysterious‚ wealthy man‚ Gatsby‚ and how he learned of Gatsby’s tragic life story. Interestingly‚ there are many themes and ideas that the novel‚ The Great Gatsby explores but Gatsby’s pursuit of the American dream is one of its prominent themes. The novel explores the idea in multiple ways and some of these ways being symbolism‚ dialogue and actions

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    In Francis Scott Fitzgerald’s Novel the Great Gatsby he uses several different characters to show that the American dream is not attainable no matter how hard you work or how successful you are in life. The Novel includes characters who are rich and poor ones that came from money and ones that did not and no matter how rich they were they always wanted something else. The characters all want the one thing they don’t have or can’t have whether it be items you can purchase with money or not.     Before

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    pursuit of the American dream is a key characteristic of “The Great Gatsby”. Scott Fitzgerald demonstrates to us the very bleak and inadequate lifestyle of the very affluent who thrived off of new money during the roaring 20’s. During the 20’s many people thrived due to the sudden rise of the stock market following World War I. This led to many new wealthy individuals who had essentially achieved the American dream‚ at least they thought that they had. Fitzgerald who wrote “The Great Gatsby” in 1925 wants

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    The American Dream is the idea of the “desired” happy life that everybody wants to achieve: having money‚ a big house‚ and a perfect family. The book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about how to upper class fails to achieve their American Dreams. The main character‚ Nick Carraway‚ narrates the story‚ telling the reader how he perceives the upper class as being hollow. Fitzgerald uses Gatsby’s life to symbolize the overarching theme of the failure to grasp the American Dream‚ which results

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    The Great Gatsby and the American Dream One would say the American Dream is somewhat like the sun. On the outside‚ sometimes it is one of the most beautiful things in the world‚ but to really know it‚ and all of the dangers that come with it‚ one has to dig into the dangerous and corrupt insides. In The Great Gatsby‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald depicts the 1920’s as a time of decay of social and moral values; evidence of this is the greed and the pursuit of pleasure. Jay Gatsby’s constant parties epitomized

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    For decades people have had American Dreams they dedicate their lives‚ giving it their all for the goals that they have set up for themselves. However‚ while seeming to be a good motivating factor for Americans‚ most of the time these dreams are unsuccessful or unattainable for the people that work so hard toward them. Since there is more often failure in achieving an American Dream‚ many people have negative opinions toward the concept itself. The best description of this ideology is reflected by

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    The Great Gatsby as a description of the failure of the American dream. The Great Gatsby is a concentrated meditation on "the American dream‚" understood as the faith that anyone‚ even of the most humble origins‚ can attain wealth and social standing in the United States through talent and individual initiative. Fitzgerald explores the compelling appeal of this dream‚ and the circumstances that render it as deceptive as it is enduring. Fitzgerald’s protagonist is a young man from North Dakota

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    In life‚ Appearance is how and what someone appears to be; judging people on what is on the outside‚ it is basically how it seems. Reality is the real version of something to deal with. Appearance versus reality is a very important theme in William Shakespeare’s Macbeth. In this play‚ there are three characters that are deceived by what appears to be real‚ and the tragic consequences that follow this error in judgment. They are King Duncan‚ who trusted Macbeth too much; Lady Macbeth‚ who got tricked

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    APPEARANCE VS REALITY Appearance vs reality is a really famous theme in the Shakespeare’s plays. In Macbeth those who create or fall for appearance vs reality are punished‚ and those who do not fall for it are successful. This is shown through Duncan and Macbeth who fell for appearance vs reality and died for it and Malcolm who did not fall for it and succeeds. In Shakespearean tragedies appareance vs reality always lead to the downfall of a character. In Act 1 scene 6 Shakespeare shows

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    The Broken American Dream of the 1920s An accurate name for the 1920s is the roaring twenties. This was a decade full of social transformation and industrialization. Through this shift‚ a degradation in social moral occurred. A victim of this shift is the character J. Gatsby in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. Gatsby is “corrupted by values and attitudes that he holds in common with a society that destroys him”(44). Through this mutual and obscured social moral‚ Gatsby seems to obtain a destructive

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