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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

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The Great Gatsby
Ever wonder what it is like being one of the most rich socialites living The American Dream? We learn through Jay Gatsby’s life that it does not guarantee happiness, as happiness cannot be bought. In the novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald Jay Gatsby learns through many events that occur in his life that money cannot buy you happiness, a relationship that is based off materialistic things is never going to work, and The American Dream is a fallacy. Throughout the novel, Jay Gatsby pursues the appearance of having achieved the American Dream with him plenty of money, but Jay Gatsby’s life proves this dream is a fallacy. It cannot bring him the one thing that gives him true happiness, his love Daisy.

Jay Gatsby is determined to become a rich socialite, and thinks if this happens that his life will be perfect. He than realizes when he achieves his version of The American Dream by having incredible amounts of money, power and social status that these things do not bring him happiness at all. The one thing that does give him happiness he cannot buy, resulting in him learning money cannot buy happiness. Jay throws lavish parties all the time and everyone has a ball until the next morning he feels unsatisfied with life. Inside though he feels like he is missing something that will complete his happiness. Every night he hopes Daisy shows up so he can show off all the fancy materialistic things he has, but at the end of the day, even with all these fancy

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