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The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

Decent Essays

The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, a novel about the chase for love and the American dream in which a man named Gatsby’s quest for a girl named Daisy turns out to be much like the pursuit of the American Dream. Both are made out to be better and more attainable than they are in reality and end up falling short of these expectations. Gatsby builds up his perception of Daisy much like the American dream is advocated for and supported by older generations. Instead of attaining what he thought was his ultimate conquest and realizing his ideal of true success, Gatsby ends up alone, dishonored and dead. If the American Dream is increasingly difficult to attain because it simply isn’t possible for the younger generation in the current economic, …show more content…

He pursued the idea of reuniting with the object of his fantasy with such enthusiasm it bordered on obsession. As this passage reveals; “He had thrown himself into it with a creative passion, adding to it all the time, decking it out with every bright feather that drifted his way” (Fitzgerald 101). Eventually, his love for Daisy is merely an obsession with her image and not Daisy herself. When he was finally reunited with Daisy, his expectation betrayed him and he lied to himself in order to keep his imagination and idea of her alive for as long as he could. Gatsby’s expectation and fanatical upkeep of the illusion of the enthusiastic reunion he had hoped for, was doomed from the start because things had changed and were not as he …show more content…

In this passage, “The flowers were unnecessary, for at two o’clock a greenhouse arrived from Gatsby’s, with innumerable receptacles to contain it” (Fitzgerald 89), Gatsby’s outlandish display shows how desperate he had become in his pursuit. It’s much like the way that students are now preparing to go to school and get a job which is what has been said leads to “the American Dream.” It’s not uncommon to hear someone say “Well, it will look good on my transcript” or “I need to take this class so I can get into a good college,” when, in reality that may just be attempts to make an impression but with little true passion or purpose. Are young people over doing themselves just to achieve something that may not even exist

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