Corrupted American Dream in the Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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After World War I ended, America appeared to be a promise land of opportunities for people who are willing to work for it. However, for some, it corrupted them as they set to reach the American dream by acquiring wealth for the only purpose to pursue pleasure. The Great Gatsby is a 1925 novel written by F. Scott Fitzgerald showing that no one is unaffected by the corruption. This novel is seen through the eyes of Nick Carraway, who moves from the mid-west to west-egg to chase his American dream. He observes the people and events around him as he follows the attempts of his neighbor Jay Gatsby, to gain back Daisy Buchanan’s love. Through the novel, characters appear to enjoy the freedom of the 1920s, but it comes to an end as characters are shown to have a miserable life. George and Myrtle Wilson both want to climb high in the social classes but approach it in two different ways. With George, he follows the rules and tries to progress as a hard working laborer but his wife Myrtle is completely the opposite she is so intend in being in a higher class she loses her morals and cheats on her husband. On a similar idea, Gatsby has been blinded by love, and tries to get back Daisy’s love no matter what it costs using his illegally earned wealth. We see these empty lives and the corruptions of the American dream in the novel through the character of George Wilson’s honesty and unsuccessful hard work, Myrtle Wilson’s lost morals, and Gatsby’s single-minded attempt to recreate the past as Nick shows he is out of sympathy and despises the lower class and only admires the person he identifies himself as.
Though George Wilson is the most honest and hardworking man in the city, he is one of those people who suffers from the failure of America...

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... the new generation that is wealthy and whom is not afraid to spend all the money and show off its wealth. This shows how much the people in the 1920s are into money and their economic statuses. Fitzgerald indicates the defect of the American dream being obsessed with wealth.
The American dream can be approached in many directions and ways to define it. The main definition and idea for this theory is success. Through Fitzgerald’s novel the concept of the American dream and to become successful is mostly seen to obtain all the wealth and being in a high economic status. We see this through the lives of George Wilson, Myrtle Wilson, Jay Gatsby, and Nick Carraway, however they all result in corruption and eventually to a misery life. As the American dream is being interpreted differently, it is still constantly being used and continues to be a concept in the society.

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