American Dream Essay Great Gatsby

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Perception and reality do not always align. Is true love really true love, or is it a farce, a self–created mythical re–interpretation of the thing we hold so dear? In The Great Gatsby, is Gatsby really in love with Daisy, or his vision of her? Does she feel the same way for him, or does she truly love him? And what does the green light at the end of Daisy's dock mean to Gatsby? As Gatsby falls in love with Daisy, Nick is slightly intrigued by this almost improbable match. How can a determined, wealthy man fall in love with a woman so shallow that she wishes her daughter to "be a fool ... a beautiful little fool." (p. 17)? To everyone else, it's obvious that Daisy is extremely ...show more content... He's got the money, the big house, parties every Friday with hundreds of people, but all of this is for the final piece of the pie: a girl. This is especially more impactful because his money (or lack thereof) was the reason he never was able to get with Daisy in the first place. This brings about another face of the argument: does this apply to Daisy as well? Daisy had been pressured to reject Jay Gatsby back during the war since he was a soldier, and short of money. Daisy came from old money, and didn't see Gatsby as a suitable mate for her solely on his monetary status. But now that Gatsby's 'all grown up' and rich, Daisy's suddenly in love again. Daisy falls for the same shallowness that Gatsby does. She doesn't love Gatsby for who he is–she does like him for his personality, partly, but it's mostly because he has the money now, and is therefore much more qualified to be with her. Daisy really doesn't want to be with Tom, for example, "I'd never seen a girl so mad about her husband" (p. 76) Jordan says, on how Daisy felt after marrying Tom. She wanted Gatsby. Or rather, she wanted to have a nice husband that would be a caring, rich gentleman. And Gatsby fills that idea up perfectly. Daisy is seeking her own version of the American Dream, and Gatsby just happens to be in it, just as Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
The American Dream In The Great Gatsby Essay "It is the elusive Gatsby, the cynical idealist, who embodies America in all of its messy glory." Clearly as Adam Cohen asserts in his New York Times article "Jay Gatsby, Dreamer, Criminal, Jazz Age Rogue, Is a Man for Our Times", this phenomenon is indeed true in that the American Dream is presented in F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby as an idea that has been depraved into a dream characterized by the constant shift in ethics and fraudulence centered around materialistic visions of opulence and wealth. Jay Gatsby is the American psyche because he manifests the dynamic and complex nature of the American Dream in the sense that he is simultaneously both corrupt yet morally good. Gatsby exemplifies the ethical American Dream with ...show more content... He constructs a mansion, throws opulent parties, bathes in luxuries, and uses Nick Carraway as a liaison all to attract Daisy's attention. Daisy represents everything that Gatsby endeavors for–the narrator compares her to a golden girl. Trying to pinpoint what exactly made her voice so distinctive, Gatsby and Nick conclude that her voice is "full of money–that was the inexhaustible charm that rose and fell in it, the jingle of it, the cymbals' song of it .... High in a white palace the king's daughter" (120). The idiosyncrasy of her voice is that it draws one in with quietude and contains promises of secret pleasures such as vast riches, luring men in with her raspy, indulgent murmurs. Unfortunately, Gatsby is too late in realizing that money is not synonymous with happiness, as explored in the following paragraph. On the other hand, Gatsby epitomizes the corrupt American Dream as well. Gatsby is such a delusional idealist that even though Daisy is married and has a child, he believes that his dream will be realized the moment she admits that she is not, and never was, in love with her husband, Tom Buchanan. His devout confidence in self–invention leads him to construct a completely new identity that isolates him from others. Carraway comments on the fabricated persona when he notes, " [Gatsby] smiled understandingly–much more than understandingly [..] some time before he introduced himself I'd got the strong impression that he was Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby Analysis In the great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald, the author shows many times that the most important thing is the American dream that he shows through his novel, The Great Gatsby. In the novel, Fitzgerald illustrates that the 'American Dream' is not only declining, but is an illusion and does not exist in reality. His work suggests that no matter how much ambition, determination or work ethic one possesses, people not born into wealth will not succeed in the struggle to overcome society and its harshness, and will not be able to surpass society's imposed glass ceiling limitations. This is shown by Gatsby, the valley of ashes and the green light that symbolises Gatsby's hope and dream for a life with Daisy. The american dream that is unattainable, as Fitzgerald's shows it by the comparison between the west egg and the east egg.The west egg is where the new rich live those who made all of their money via illegal ways playing the system after the World War I ended. These people do not only want to get rich but want to seem like they were always rich. They are shown in the novel as showoffs like gatsby's pink suit and roll royce and having a big mansion throwing lavish parties and awkward like gatsby seems to be. Gatsby always says,"Having a good time old sport." Gatsby always uses the word "old Sport" to fit in and look like he is from the east and he always had money. This clearly shows the excessive need for materialistic items they want. On on the other side the east egg is the Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a novel about the chase for love and the American dream in which a man named Gatsby's quest for a girl named Daisy turns out to be much like the pursuit of the American Dream. Both are made out to be better and more attainable than they are in reality and end up falling short of these expectations. Gatsby builds up his perception of Daisy much like the American dream is advocated for and supported by older generations. Instead of attaining what he thought was his ultimate conquest and realizing his ideal of true success, Gatsby ends up alone, dishonored and dead. If the American Dream is increasingly difficult to attain because it simply isn't possible for the younger generation in the current economic, ...show more content... In this passage, "The flowers were unnecessary, for at two o'clock a greenhouse arrived from Gatsby's, with innumerable receptacles to contain it" (Fitzgerald 89), Gatsby's outlandish display shows how desperate he had become in his pursuit. It's much like the way that students are now preparing to go to school and get a job which is what has been said leads to "the American Dream." It's not uncommon to hear someone say "Well, it will look good on my transcript" or "I need to take this class so I can get into a good college," when, in reality that may just be attempts to make an impression but with little true passion or purpose. Are young people over doing themselves just to achieve something that may not even exist Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
The American Dream In The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby (American Dream) The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a fictional novel about a young man's life , narrated by his closest friend Nick. This young extravagantly wealthy man known as Mr.Gatsby, lived in the 1920's and represented the american dream in many different ways. In F. Scott Fitzgerald " The Great Gatsby " Tom and Daisy were born into this weathiness. Gatsby on the other hand had to work for his money by going to the army. In the Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald wanted to display the elusiveness of the American Dream and how more money makes the society during this time period lose their morality. Gatsby came from a very poor background with lack of education. As he started to build his own dreams forgetting about what happened in the past and he tried to build his own dream from scratch. Which after in the novel showed he became very successful man. He showed a true example of living the life of the American dream that by hard work, motivation and with no support we can live a lavish life like an American man. Gatsby was a self made man with no background. As one of the article about Gatsby life better illustrate that "The American dream consisted of the belief (sometimes thought of as a promise) that people of talent in this land of opportunity and plenty could reasonably aspire to material success" ( Trask, David F, WG). The novel illustrates the life of the people in early 1920's as a life easy money selling alcohol and Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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American Dream Gatsby What is the American Dream? The American Dream is a common feeling felt by Americans that symbolizes the journey of chasing one's wildest dreams and aspirations. The American Dream is often associated with the desire for wealth, fame, spiritual improvement, or social status. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald features Jay Gatsby , a man born into a blue collar family who rises up the social ranks due to America's capitalist system. Many Americans relate to the desire of experiencing a lavish lifestyle full of material luxury Jay Gatsby in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald stood as a symbol of the dangers of pursuing wealth and as an example of the economic opportunities provided by America's Capitalist system. Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Great Gatsby American Dream Essay Kaylie Skoumal Mrs. Sabers English II 6 October 2017 Destruction of an American Dream "The American Dream is that any man or woman, despite of his or her background, can change their circumstances and rise as high as they are willing to work" (Fabrizio Moreira Quotes). Jay Gatsby believed that he could achieve his American Dream of being successful and marrying Daisy by working extremely hard in his lifetime. He labored to make a great amount of money through a disreputable way with Meyer Wolfshiem. His main agenda was to win Daisy back to him and he did everything he possibly could to make that happen in his life. In F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby , Jay Gatsby strived for his idea of the American Dream, but fell short in the end. ...show more content... Next, Gatsby could be seen laboring to achieve his American Dream through his various methods he used to try to become wealthy. The first time Gatsby almost succeeded with his dream is when he became Dan Cody's assistant. Gatsby had the chance to happen upon the millionaire Dan Cody. Liking Gatsby, Cody immediately offered the young adult a job. Gatsby traveled the world with Cody, but his employment was finally terminated after five years when Cody died. "And it was from Cody that he inherited money–a legacy of twenty–five thousand dollars. He didn 't get it. He never understood that was used against him, but what remained of the millions went intact to Ella Kaye" (Fitzgerald 100). Gatsby almost succeeded in earning a large amount of money through Cody's will, but Ella Kaye, Cody's mistress, was able to extract the money under Gatsby's nose for herself. Once again Gatsby was back to where he had started and all his work over the five years was for nothing. Nevertheless, Gatsby did not give up and after he was released from the war he started to work with Meyer Wolfsheim to make money in unsavory ways. Wolfsheim was not a respectable businessman, but through his methods he was able to make an enormous mass of cash. "'He's [Wolfsheim] the man who fixed the World's series back in 1919'" (Fitzgerald 73).Wolfsheim was the one responsible in the 1919's of fixing the World's series to win money through gambling. Wolfsheim and Gatsby worked Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
The Great Gatsby and the American Dream The Great Gatsby is an interesting and thought–provoking novel by the American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald that sets to explore important and complex social themes such as the hollowness of the upper class and the characteristics and decline of the American Dream during the prosperous years preceding the Great Depression. The Great Gatsby is presented at the surface as a thwarted love story between a man, Jay Gatsby , and a woman, Daisy Buchanan. However, the main theme of the novel goes beyond this and comprises a larger, and indeed less romantic, social context. Furthermore, despite the novel's setting in New York during the summer of 1922 it is still a representation of America throughout the whole ...show more content... The sphere of this decade is dominated by cynicism, greed, and the empty pursuit of pleasure. Fitzgerald seems to suggest that the reckless jubilance that created the opportunities for while decadent parities and loud jazz music, similarly to Gatsby's parties every night, was the direct result of this atmosphere. However, the pursuit of pleasure in such a manner did not bring happiness or fulfillment but only brought about the corruption of the American Dream. This corruption of the American Dream is due to the unrestrained desire for power and money, which surpassed any sense of nobility in people's goals and motivations. To understand this presentation of the American Dream one has to first comprehend the characteristics of this Dream. The American Dream encompasses the myth of America's birth, a myth that is defined by a familiar phrase: The New World. The establishment of the United States, the growth of the country and its power in such a short time, and the sense of success felt across the nation as a result created the concept of the American Dream. America was conceived originally as a new beginning, a new world, a second chance. It was a world that contrasted with the Old World's structure and all its corruption, social divisions, tyranny, and superficiality. On this basis is the American Dream founded. The key concepts that lie at the heart of the American Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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"The loneliest moment in someone's life is when they are watching their whole world fall apart, and all they can do is stare blankly." ― F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby The American Dream, a long standing ideal embodies the hope that one can achieve financial success, political power, and everlasting love through dedication and hard work. During the Roaring 20s, people in America put up facades to mask who they truly were. In The Great Gatsby , Fitzgerald conveys that the American Dream is simply an illusion, that is idealist and unreal. In the novel, Gatsby, a wealthy socialite pursues his dream, Daisy. In the process of pursuing Daisy, Gatsby betrays his morals and destroys himself. Through the eyes of the narrator, Nick, ...show more content... The green light symbolizes Gatsby's hopes and dreams, an illusion that slowly possesses him; specifically his American Dream, Daisy. Gatsby sees Daisy just as immigrants from foreign countries once saw America; as a symbol of hope, the ideal life, and a future full of opportunity. Gatsby lives solely for this green light, which that gives him a sense of identity and purpose. Gatsby's dream is initially pure but in the process of pursuing it, the vision becomes tainted. His American Dream slowly takes possession of Gatsby, warping his illusion and dreams into reality. For five years, after meeting Daisy, he yearns and longs for her slowly changing her in his mind into a god. Over time the real memories began to fade and his dreams of what she should be took her place in his mind. When Gatsby finally wins her over, he expects too much of her, leading her to feel distressed and pressured. The rope ultimately snaps when Gatsby pressures Daisy to say that she never loved Tom, her husband, and only loved Gatsby. She wails and protests, that Gatsby "wants too much" and that she can never live up to his dreams of her (134). Because Gatsby had dreamed of her for so many years, he set an illusion of what Daisy should be like in his eyes. The dreams are too difficult for Daisy to meet and she soon collapses under the Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Great Gatsby Daisy The American Dream itself varies among each individual. The American Dream can be the aspirations of freedom, equality, or, more commonly, wealth. These "dreams" are what are associated with America and its gifts to Americans. At youth, adults teach that the American Dream is reachable through hard work, sacrifice, and sound virtue. Ingrained in every child's head is the belief that in America, anything is possible. Television, newspapers, movies, cartoons, and sensational stories reinforce these lessons. This projection of the American Dream is why thousands come to America. The media and government, at times, make this dream seem so attainable, so real we give our all to our dreams. In reality though, the American Dream essentially is just ...show more content... Gatsby sacrifices himself to fulfill his dream. In the end, his dream fails completely, and his life finds an abrupt end. Growing up poverty, he had created a character that was rich and powerful. To make his fantasy a reality he fervently, yet illegally, became rich. To complete his façade, he wanted Daisy Buchannan. Knowing that she had wedded another Gatsby planned meticulously how he was going to woo her. He dedicated five years of his life to winning her over. To him she was the American Dream. She represented money, power, and prestige. All of the qualities he desired in life. Symbolically, Daisy is the American Dream of wealth and Gatsby represents the ambitious Americans. This is because Gatsby when he finally wooed Daisy he became disappointed. This disappointment due to that Daisy "tumbled short of his dreams... because of the colossal vitality of his illusion." Correlating that Americans' vision of wealth lacks the sparkle and splendor of what is expected. To add bitterness to the disappointment, Gatsby does not get Daisy in the end. Instead, for his zealous struggles he is compensated with a bullet. The lesson of the story being that wealth lacks the splendor and glamour imagined. Although Gatsby's fate was the most extreme of cases, being wealthy and championing wealth has a cost. Sometimes this cost results in the destruction or relinquishing of self or the spirit of Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
Great Gatsby Vs. The American Dream Essay Great Gatsby vs. The American Dream/Materialism How do we define this ideology of the American Dream? Society has formulated this idea over time. We as people have chosen to base our lives around it and make it our goal to try and achieve something that in all honesty is just this abstract idea that we as have chosen to believe and chase over time. Due to society following this ideology, people have grown to believe that happiness can only be achieved after they have reached the American Dream. You see these advertisements for products that make you think if you don't own that specific product than you are not going to achieve the American Dream. Media has managed to turn people into these materialistic beings that are just sitting there waiting to be told what to buy next. For my paper I will be analyzing the film The Great and focus primarily on this idea of materialism and more specifically how this American Dream myth and ideology plays into it. Why does the media want us to believe that happiness is derived from the "stuff" we buy and not the things we already have? Page twenty–four in the textbook says, "Book, films, and television shows do not just spontaneously occur: all are created as products to be bought and sold in a greater system of commodity exchange." (Ott. 24) The film The Great Gatsby is pretty much the epitome of what the American Dream myth really is and expresses this notion of materialism throughout it. Surprisingly the film's main protagonist is not Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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1. How does Fitzgerald relate Gatsby's dream to the American Dream? What seems to be his message about the American Dream as expressed in the last two paragraphs of the novel? The American Dream expresses the idea that every citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success through hard work, determination, and initiative. Gatsby conveys courage, determination, and perseverance in his attempt to achieve his dreams to be with Daisy, to attain wealth, and uphold a high status in the community. "Her voice is full of money" (page 120), this quote ties to the desire of wealth and a high social status. People are proud of their success and like to showcase it off as much as possible. The message about the American Dream expresses that there will always be an infinite green light to strive for in life. After accomplishing one dream there is always a new one following shortly. 2. What does the novel say about materialism? What, if any, are the similarities between the 1920s American society and the 21st Century American society with regard to materialism? Materialism is the tendency to consider material possessions and physical comfort more important than spiritual values. "I've been everywhere and seen everything and done everything" (page 17). Daisy says this to brag about her lavish life style to Nick and Miss Baker. This makes her personality sound very conceited and stuck up. She is absorbed in the materialistic way of living. The motivations of the characters all revolve around money and riches. This is extremely similar to how we live in the 21st century. The American society today is always aiming to have the nicest cars, houses, and the newest and most up to date possessions. People like to show off their wealth by expressing it through possessions and bragging. 3. Some critics suggest that although Gatsby is the principal figure in the action of the novel, Nick is the most significant character because of his moral development. Exactly what does Nick learn from his experiences in the East? Nick realizes from his experiences that people in East Egg are very fake and absentminded. Tom and Daisy are perfect examples of this kind of lifestyle. They are very self– centered and express no sympathy Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Gatsby American Dream Essay The American Dream The great Gatsby is a classic novel in which money is centered around everything. All Jay Gatsby wants to do is live the American dream. Some say Gatsby did live the American dream. Though Gatsby made lots of money and threw tons of parties their was one thing he was missing. The thing Gatsby was missing was a peaceful state of mind and a lover. In this book written by Scott Fitzgerald called The Great Gatsby Jay Gatsby finds out the American Dream isn 't attainable by everyone. The Great Gatsby is a book that shows how the American dream is attainable for many but can only be grasped by few. Only few people get to live dream lives. Like in the book The Great Gatsby Jay Gatsby is a ...show more content... So most the times Jay committed crimes multiple times to get money. The quote best examples Gatsby by saying " Gatsby didn 't even achieve all of his wealth through hard work, like the American dream would stipulate instead he earned money through crime." One of the crimes he committed was that he would sell alcohol for some quick cash. Gatsby has been at work for Daisy ever since he met her, but in the end Daisy always chose her husband and not her lover. He would always try to win her over with expensive things. This quote describes perfectly what Gatsby was doing, " his goal is galvanized for him early on when was a poor young army lieutenant he is prevented from pursuing a relationship with Daisy." Gatsby still trying his best efforts sent a love letter to Daisy on her wedding night. Daisy opened the letter, she loved it but knew she had to marry Tom. When Gatsby is killed, Daisy forgets all about him and moves on with her life. This quote describes Daisy and Gatsby 's relationship. " Possibly it had occurred to him that the colossal significance of that light had now vanished forever. Compared to the great distance that had separated him from Daisy it had seemed very near to her, almost touching her." When Daisy finally is won over by Jay Gatsby he dies and Daisy immediately runs back to Tom just as she always has done in the past. Jay lived a luxurious lifestyle but because of the people that Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby In the 1920's, the American Dream was something that was desired by everyone, but in most cases everyone's "dream" was different from one another. How I see the American Dream, is the perfect life you want. It's the life that you see that is sometimes hard, or impossible to achieve . In the book The Great Gatsby , Fitzgerald views the American Dream as not always about money. In the book, some of the characters´ American Dream was just to be happy with a significant other. Overall, the American Dream reflects on a person's status in economics, which can affects their emotional standpoint. Tom is a person that came from a wealthy family and he had a great childhood. When he got older he was also a very successful man. As he was described in The Great Gatsby "Now he was a sturdy, straw haired man of thirty with a rather hard mouth and a supercilious manner. Two shining, arrogant eyes had established dominance over his face and gave him the appearance of always leaning aggressively forward. Not even the effeminate swank of his riding clothes could hide the enormous power of that body–he seemed to fill those glistening boots until he strained the top lacing and you could see a great pack of muscle shifting when his shoulder moved under his thin coat. It was a body capable of enormous leverage–a cruel body. "(1.19) You would think since he was on the very top on the economic side and had great things in his life, he would have had a perfect life and everything Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Essay On The American Dream In The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby Essay The Great Gatsby has always been a great book, but have you ever wondered what the meaning of "The American Dream" is..? To me the american dream... is anyone and everyone can come here to american and achieve their goals, they can have better lives here in the US, they can be more successful when they put their minds to it. Fitzgerald's was making it seem that the rich or more money you have the happier you'll be, the better off you are in life. He paints a picture making it seem money will buy their happiness forever. The american dream is about success and dreams, not about money or wealth. The american dream from 2 very different point of views. Fitzgerald made his point of view that with money your life is ...show more content... He wanted to make his life better than what it was when he was younger. Gatsby didn't like how his life was so he set a goal to achieve better and do better. When he was legal he changed his name and got a clean slate. "Who is this gatsby anyhow...some big bootlegger." Gatsby was known for having this big huge beautiful house, where he would throw these huge parties. Everyone in the whole town that knew about the party would dress fancy and wear their expensive things, and have a good time at the gatsby house. He made all this money and got wealthy by doing dirty work with the mob. Fitzgerald made gatsby seem he was unhappy when he was poor, but when he changed his name and started making money Jay Gatsby was happy and content with life. The east egg has always been about bonds, and new companies. It was starting to become wealth and sky rocket in businesses. It helps people make money and build the community. "I moved to the east and learn about the bond business." the west side was becoming trashy and old looking and was starting to look like the slums. Nick decides he would be better off on the east side to start a new life event. He started learning about the bond business, everyone else in his family was in the bond business so he started supporting it. He thought moving to the east would help him with business and help him with money and would be better off in the east than the west. Since the west was getting poor looking Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby The idea of American Dream as presented by F. Scott Fitzgerald in the Great Gatsby novel involves rising from poverty or rags to richness and wealthy. The American Dream exemplifies that elements such as race, gender, and ethnicity are valueless as they do not influence the ability of an individual to rise to power and richness. This American Dream makes the assumption that concepts such as xenophobia are non–existent in America a concept that is not true and shows vagueness of the American Dream. In his novel, F. Scott Fitzgerald uses the Great Gatsby to demonstrate the overall idea of living the American dream. Gatsby leaves his small village of farmers and manages to work his way up the ladder although some of the money he uses to climb the ladder is associated with crime "He was a son of God and he must be about His Father's Business, the service of a vast, vulgar and meretricious beauty" (Fitzgerald 6.7). This phrase shows that Gatsby wasn't meant for a life similar to that of his father but rather destined for greatness. However, his dream his short–lived and he doesn't make it to the top as Daisy who is a symbol of his wealthy rejects her and a series of events transpire that result in his death before he could live his American Dream alongside everyone else who was working up the ladder to live the American Dream. F. Scott Fitzgerald proposes that the American Dream is corrupt and also a mediocrity that anyone in America can rise from rags to riches as in the real Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The Great Gatsby American Dream In the roaring years of the 1920's, America encountered a dramatic, (yet, exciting) social, cultural, and politic change. The restrictions of the country's Victorian past were no longer a part of its society and the rise of a consumer culture, the upsurge of mass entertainment, and the so–called "revolution in morals and manners" became the new description of America. F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby reflected on this decade, illustrating the ambition of one man trying to upscale in his life in order to reach the "American Dream" and his despair of losing it. Fitzgerald described the hardships that come when trying to obtain something unattainable and how the intensity of that desire can blind people of their realistic outcomes. The Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby Although love should bring contentment to one's life, Fitzgerald shows that the desperation of living with the American Dream of wealth and hope twists the relationship between Gatsby and Daisy, creating unpromising and lost love. Gatsby's love for Daisy began after they met at the Red Cross. After Gatsby was sent away to the war, Daisy met Tom, a wealthy man. Daisy's biggest concern was to live the American Dream and being with Tom was a great opportunity to live that dream. On Daisy's bridal dinner, Tom gave her a string of pearls valued three hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Later on, she was found very drunk and holding a letter from Gatsby. "She wouldn't let go of the letter. She took it into the tub with her and squeezed ...show more content... "There must have been moments even that afternoon when Daisy tumbled short of his dreams – not through her own fault, but because of the colossal vitality of his illusion. It had gone beyond her, beyond everything. He had thrown himself into it with a creative passion, adding to it all the time, decking it out with every bright feather that drifted his way. No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart." The idea of love is twisted because Daisy's selfishness shows that she loves both Gatsby and Tom but what she truly actually loves is money. She was also deceiving because she tried to make Gatsby believe that she was never in love with Tom and that he was the only man she wanted. She does this as a way to keep her relationships intact. Daisy is also a big flirt towards Gatsby. She tells him that she loves him and that she wants to be with him but she eventually proves Gatsby wrong when she doesn't leave Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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Great Gatsby American Dream Essay The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about the struggle of achieving the American dream, and how much a person is willing to do to reach it. The book's focus is on the obsession of Gatsby, the protagonist, and his feelings for Daisy, a married woman who he was previously involved with. The novel also focuses on Gatsby's determination to make her fall in love with him by the glitz of money and power. Fitzgerald uses the symbols of wealth, superficiality and irresponsibility to convey the idea that the American dream is unattainable. Wealth is a factor that propels the actions of the characters in the novel. In the Great Gatsby , most of the characters are wealthy and are able to do a lot because of their prosperity. Wealth ...show more content... Daisy is one of the most superficial characters in the novel. She shows her shallow ways by treating her child as is she isn't even real, crooning "you absolute dream." After saying this, she shoos her daughter away to the nurse and doesn't show any interest in seeing her again. Her superficial attitude reached all the way to her vision of Gatsby. Daisy has the illusion of Gatsby as "the advertisement of the man." She lives in a world where nothing is true and there are no consequences. She is unable to be happy because she doesn't know what real happiness is. She is unable to achieve her dreams because she doesn't know what to dream. Fitzgerald shows that people of the upper class are superficial and cannot achieve their dreams. This is shown through Gatsby's acceptance of an insincere invitation to Mr. Sloane's wife's house party. Tom Buchanan criticizes Gatsby's misjudgment and says, "My God, I believe the man's coming... doesn't he know she doesn't want him?" All the characters in the novel have had dreams during some point in their lives. Their dreams were unsuccessful because of their inability to be true and honest to people. To have a life of happiness, people need to be good to others to get something good back. By being superficial in ones attitude and actions, Fitzgerald shows that the American dream cannot be achieved. The characters are people who are delusional to the consequences of the actions and do not take Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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The American Dream can mean different things depending on who is asked. Some will answer it is the freedom of religion, class or race, others will claim it is about the ability to choose where they want to work, what they want to wear, or what's for breakfast the next day. For Jay Gatsby and many others, the American Dream is about gaining wealth and material possessions in an attempt to find happiness. Through his novel, The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald shows how the American Dream is only the concept of perfection, something that can never be acquired, but always can be reached for. Daisy Buchanon was always mesmerized by wealth. Her dream is to have a luxurious lifestyle filled splendor. Before the events of the ...show more content... Even though she is married to Tom, his wealth is not enough to satisfy her. When she sees the shirts she is sad because Tom does not have the luxury of owning such a large collection of clothing. She is blinded by wealth and always seeks more than she has. She cannot fully appreciate what she has because her dream is to always have more, and she will only be happy once she has the best, an unattainable goal that is there to tantalize. To Myrtle Wilson, the American Dream is to become wealthy and high class. For her, this is impossible. She is married to a working class man who owns an auto shop in a rundown part of New York. Myrtle is so corrupted by money that she cheats on her hardworking, loving husband, in order to be with Tom Buchanon's money. When describing her marriage, Myrtle said, "The only crazy I was was when I married him. I knew right away I made a mistake. He borrowed somebody's best suit to get married in . . . then I lay down and cried to beat the band all afternoon" (35). She was, of course, talking about money issues. She thought her husband was wealthy, but when he had to borrow a suit, she became depressed and she believed her life was ruined. Myrtles unhealthy fixation on money ruined her marriage, and led to her becoming Tom's mistress. Tom can supply her with the wealth she needs to feel happy. When given the chance, Tom will take Myrtle to parties just so she can wear the fancy clothing that he gave her. This Get more content on StudyHub.Vip
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