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Compare And Contrast The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

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The Jazz Age has been described as an era where anything seemed, and in most cases was, possible. The lively, vivacious dancing with women, wearing shorter dresses than ever seen before, added beams of color, glitz, sparkle, and glamor to the masses of parties that were held. The war had ended and Americans were on the rise. That, however, all changed. With the end of the decade came the end of the American economy, owing to the Great Depression.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck is classic American novels set in two very important eras of American history, but it is evident that they both hold true to one standard. These classics represent the two meanings that the American Dream developed to be. The first is the sense of limitless possibility, that many have come to associate with the new start that America has always symbolized. In retrospect, the opportunities were so bountiful fresh job prospects and thus the chance of gaining fame and in return fortune which became an attainable and more materialistic side of what the American Dream has come to mean. The one common trait these two stories do show is, only healthy white men can fully access The American Dream. Narrated to us by Nick Carraway, The Great Gatsby tells a tale of new a seemingly extravagant lifestyle lead by Gatsby. “It was an imitation of Hôtel de Ville in Normandy, with a tower on one side, spanking new under a thin beard of raw ivy, and a marble swimming

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