"What literary device does the author use to convey the american dream in the great gatsby" Essays and Research Papers

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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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    the American Dream. That’s the greatness of this country.” The American Dream was and still is a goal of many people today. It was originally created in 1931 by James Truslow Adams‚ who said that the dream was to live in a place where life was more fulfilling for not only yourself‚ but everyone else. Though many people follow this dream‚ others describe and create it to make it their own dream. The dream is now defined by who you are as a person‚ what you have been through‚ and ultimately what you

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    pursuing the American dream of a stable life with a family. The main character in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby”‚ Jay Gatsby‚ is also fascinated to enter into the rat race of achieving the perfect “American Dream”. He wants daisy back and for that he tries to lure her with his wealth. But just like the Stock Market Crash of 1929‚ Gatsby’s American Dream crashes. By depicting the failure of Gatsby’s dream‚ Fitzgerald proves that the American dream is an illusion. This dream of finding fortune

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    The American Dream is an ideology that through hard‚ honest work and determination‚ you can achieve success in The United States of America. In the novel "The Great Gatsby"‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald alludes to the concept of The American Dream in a time just after World War 1 and he achieves this through many characters and the environment in which they live and interact in. The main character of the novel has often been characterized as a clear representation of The American Dream‚ which is a false statement

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    A False Dream F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel‚ The Great Gatsby‚ is rife with controversial characters and ideas‚ but none more so than that of the flawed “American Dream.” Americans have always felt they can cling to the idea of the American dream‚ exploiting even the most infinitesimal sliver of hope in search of a life of fulfillment and contentedness. The poor look to the rich and powerful as symbols of the American dream coming to fruition; proof that baseless clay can be molded into something

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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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    Since its publication in 1925‚ F. S. Fitzgerald ‘ s novel The Great Gatsby has becomeone of the most cited‚ criticized and analyzed pieces of fiction in the history of Americanliterature. It has often been depicted as “ perhaps the most striking fictional analysis of the ageof the gang barons and the social conditions that produced them “( Sculley‚ 1965:1088).Without a doubt‚ it is a fantastic representation of an age in American history wheneverything was possible‚ or at least people thought it

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    The Great Gatsby A person that pursues the American Dream often has the goal of being the wealthiest and‚ the most popular person around. This picture is also painted in F. S. Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby‚ with Jay Gatsby being the “rich and the famous”. Mr. Fitzgerald communicates through this novel his own version of the American Dream with the symbolism indicated in the story. This novel takes place in the 1920’s during the Jazz Age‚ where drinking and living on the “line” is seen as being

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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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