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The American Dream In Into The Wild, By Jon Krakauer

Decent Essays

The American Dream is most commonly defined by the traditional social ideals of the US, which usually include money, status, material wealth, and democracy; the American Dream also includes the idea of the self-made man and how that hard work will pay off in the end. However, the definition of the American Dream is subjective to the individual defining it. In Into the Wild by Jon Krakauer, Christopher McCandless’ life depicts the usual definition of the American Dream through his family life and adolescence, while also showing that the typical definition does not satisfy every single person’s idea of happiness and success.
The beginning of the book depicts the American majority’s idea of what the American Dream looks like with Christopher’s privileged upbringing. His parents were successful business owners of a company they started from scratch together,
In truth McCandless had been raised in the comfortable upper-middle-class environs of Annandale, Virginia. His father, Walt, is an eminent aerospace engineer ... In 1978, Walt went into business for himself, launching a small but eventually prosperous consulting firm ... His partner in the venture was Chris's mother, Billie (19). …show more content…

His mother described him as an entrepreneur from the beginning. “As an eight-year-old, he grew vegetables behind the house in Annandale and then sold them door-to-door around the neighborhood” (115). When he was twelve he once again started another small neighborhood business called Chris’ Fast Copies that prospered. Chris continued down the path of his parent’s American Dream by going to Emory for college and graduating with a 3.75 GPA and with plans to go to law school. However, no one knew just how different Chris’ plans were from the road he had traveled down thus

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