Is The American Dream Truly Attainable Essay

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    The American Dream

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    The American dream for minorities is a difficult to obtain goal because for minorities, everyday obstacles prevent them from obtaining this dream that was never meant for them. Despite the difficulties, there exists many instances throughout history of people from a wide variety of cultural backgrounds have fought for the simple right to be able to have the chance to reach that goal. Ironically, during one of the most devastating times in our nation’s history, historian James Truslow Adams coined

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    or the phrase “the American Dream” and immediately think of fancy cars, wealth, and having a big house? Jay Gatsby, the main character in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a prime example of how the American Dream can be destroyed by modern ideals- that the once attainable dream is now lost on the American people. The novel introduces the original aspects of the American Dream along with the modernistic view of the American Dream (to show how the once touchable dream is now unrecoverable

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    all men and women to dream. In John Steinbeck’s novel “Of Mice and Men,” the American dream is sought after by many different characters. However, the main theme in the story is how these dreams are unattainable, and how because of the Great Depression, all American dreams were dead. But what is the American dream? A unitary definition does not exist, however, the meaning of living the American dream is something that differs for everyone. For some people, the American dream might be acceptance and

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    growth in America. Newfound wealth flowing into the nation’s market provided a stream of chances for impoverished people to achieve the American Dream. This gave many people the impression that social mobility was not only possible, but prevalent and that lower class and upper class could merge together in unison. In the novel The Great Gatsby by renowned American author F. Scott Fitzgerald, protagonist Jay Gatsby is used as a way of showing the impossibilities in attempting to rise through the social

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    “It’s called the American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it.” –George Carlin. In the novel, The Day of the Locust, Nathanael West is able to depict the falsity behind the American Dream. The dream is dangerous. West views Hollywood’s version of the phenomenon known as the American Dream as a myth that many people fall victim to, which is shown through the recurring themes of despair in the novel. Through the characters of The Day of the Locust, Nathaniel West is able to illustrate

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    tremendous part of our life. We learn vital skills that help us become better people and ultimately help us function in a society. That’s why the American Dream in the 1950s was entered around the family unit. People’s main goal was to nurture the family they had. Sixty years later, however, that dream has long been tainted and even lost. But why? Why has the dream that so many had changed? In the Postwar years, there was a sudden increase in the United States’ birth rate. Soldiers were coming home from

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    Great Gatsby Dbq

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    nation, one that holds entirely different values, ideas, and beliefs? The first American settlers dubbed this new, vast land the “city upon a hill”; it would act as a beacon of hope, a symbol of democracy. The entire world would gaze up at this shining example of freedom and prosperity with wonder and hope. What this “city upon a hill” represented, so to speak, was the first signs of the American Dream. The American Dream- this concept of liberty and freedom- has been the reality of the United States

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    Gatsby unconsciously and persistently pursues Daisy: his dream, his lover, his everything. This is another example the American dream does not exist when Fitzgerald states,“ Then it had not been just the stars to which he had aspired on that June night. He came alive to me, delivered suddenly from the womb of his purposeless splendor (Fitzgerald 63 ). "There must have been moments even that afternoon when Daisy tumbled short of his dreams--not through her own fault but because of the colossal vitality

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    The Pursuit of the American Dream is a concept that is controversial in the twenty-first century. Many individuals discuss whether or not it still exists today and if it is still attainable. The United States of America has always been known as a country that provides the equal opportunity for all individuals to fulfill their dreams. The wonderful aspect about the dream is that, it can be defined in many ways. For some Americans, the dream may be the perfect family and the white picket fence home

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    growth in America. Newfound wealth flowing into the nation’s market provided a stream of chances for impoverished people to achieve the American Dream. This gave many people the impression that social mobility was not only possible, but prevalent and that lower class and upper class could merge together in unison. In the novel The Great Gatsby by renowned American author F. Scott Fitzgerald, protagonist Jay Gatsby is used to show the impossibilities in attempting to rise through the social structure

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