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Comparing The American Dream And A Raisin In The Sun

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An African American slave laboring away a long day in the fields. A multi-millionaire driving down the highway in his Bugatti. One is the epitome of a working man struggling to become successful. The other is the prime desire of the ideal American Dream. Hard Work. Determination. Success. These are the ideals needed to achieve the American Dream. Money. Power. Likability. These are the ideals Willy Loman, the main character in Death of a Salesman, and Walter Lee Younger, the main character in A Raisin in the Sun, praise as their key to success. They ignore the cultural constructs of hard work and determination. Both men let the idea of money and power take hold of their minds and, ultimately, it morphs their concept of the American Dream into one that has never existed. Grasping at the false ideals of what the dream is, both men cause themselves delusions, self-doubt, and disillusions on their course of seeking the dream. The dream itself operates on false ideals. It is completely real and attainable, but the ability to do what is needed isn’t there.
Walter Lee Younger models his dream …show more content…

This idea clashes with the belief that hard work without complaint is the key to success. He drives to big cities every day to sell his product and returns home to sell himself to his family. He is a “dreamer caught in a society dominated by machines, competition, and the principle of getting ahead at any cost” (Foster 102). Willy is disillusioned in his dream because “salesmanship implies a certain element of fraud: the ability to put over or sell a commodity regardless of its intrinsic usefulness” (Clurman 133). Willy’s stunted version of the American Dream leads to his rapid psychological downfall when he can’t grasp the gap between the dream and his own reality. His mind has all too readily forged a slanted reality from which he can’t

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