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Myth In American Pastoral

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The controversial and enigmatic novel, American Pastoral, has raised some interesting questions regarding the idea of the self-made man. It tells a story of a man who does everything right, and his life ends up horribly wrong. The question then arises, can the American dream be real? Or is it just a myth, a result of luck in America? “The Swede”, or Seymour Irving Levov, was born into a Jewish community. His father raised him well, putting importance on sports and activities for school. The Swede was extremely popular, and everyone who came into contact with him had just felt his positive energy all around. Any sport or area of his life he excelled at, and he all around was just a great guy. In Roth’s book, the narrator had explained him as somewhat of a glorified figure. On page 5, he writes, “Yes, everywhere he looked, people were in love with him.” If people did not love him, they would have loved to be him.
Because he did everything right, he was a shining example of how the life in America was supposed to go. Or at least, at first. He married Miss New Jersey, he had three boys and one girl, and he had taken on his father’s booming business. He had the textbook definition of the American dream- working from the bottom to earn his position in life. Roth says, on page 127, “When …show more content…

She had begun to visit New York on Saturdays, and would refuse any questioning her father would give her. She would start staying out without permission, and just giving complete disregard to her father’s rules. He also was somewhat retaliated to her behavior and tried to control her behavior, as he tells her to just stay home. “I’m not driving you to the train. You’re not leaving the house.” (Roth, 109) He eventually realizes that she is in a radical political movement, and fearing for her safety, he tells her to involve herself here. And, she involves herself very

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