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The American Dream In James T. Adams's The American Dream

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The phrase “The American Dream” was popularized by James T. Adams in his book Epic of America. The meaning of the American Dream has changed overtime but still has the same idea: anything is achievable if you work for it, regardless of your financial or social standpoint. The twentieth century was filled with Americans in the working class motivated by the popularized phrase. People wanted to work and improve their positions, but suddenly, everything changed. The American dream turned merely a dream; a literal dream that can’t be physically touched. The dream isn’t completely dead, just not unattainable for most. The difference in today’s society from the past is what changed the thoughts on the dream. Technology is excelling rapidly, …show more content…

Andrew Carnegie is a perfect example of someone with the patience and work ethic who achieved the American dream. Carnegie started off as an awfully poor person, he made 4 dollars a week at his job at the American Railroad Company. However, he worked his way up the totem pole and eventually became known as one of the richest men alive. In an article written by the researcher Joe Mont, says that Carnegie is known as the second-richest man of all time (CITATION). Carnegie worked for what he wanted; it took years to achieve where he was! Our impatience of today’s society due to technology has lead the American dream to be out of arm's reach, and no one is willing to get up and go after it. Next, the pessimism in low income families/neighborhoods is killing the American Dream. The American dream is meant to give hope for families in low income financial situations. Therefore, rich families who have everything they could ever want are already living the american dream; they don’t need to reach it. It is the low income families who are the ones looking for the American Dream, and the reason it is dying is because they don’t believe in it. A quote from the book Invisible in Austin: life and labor in an American city states, “In fact, people raised in the United States are more likely to stay in the same class as their parents--both those born at the bottom and at

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