Darrin Mcmahon's In Pursuit Of Unhappiness

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“Absence and lack of communication makes the heart idealize a person and subconsciously twist one’s perception of them into something greater than they really are.” (Peint, 2014). Some would argue that the highly acclaimed, widely known American novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a tragic love story revolving around an idealistic, predominantly white high-class society and its “burdensome” dilemmas. Others would argue the novel to be a satirical composition on the lives of the 1% population basking in luxury, their only complication being the pursuit of love and true happiness. Personally I, having read, analyzed, and discussed the text in depth and seeking out my own opinion on the subject matter, have come to categorize The Great Gatsby as another version of the American dream and the pursuit of happiness. What I believe makes the …show more content…

It is then, when Gatsby emerged from F. Scott Fitzgerald. A true character of 1920’s America, the parties, the young-money, the helplessly in love, the pursuit of happiness. Darrin McMahon’s “In Pursuit of Unhappiness” explores the topic of seeking felicity and encountering barriers that we would not preoccupy ourselves with if we existed in an otherwise empathetic society. “Secular culture since the 17th century made "happiness," in the form of pleasure or good feeling, not only morally acceptable but commendable in and of itself.” (para. 4). As this quote exemplifies, there is a cultural notion of happiness being expected to be our default state of being. Due to this ingrown conception, we are riddled with the demand of forcing our path to contentment, as Gatsby, a character dumbfounded by a love he thought unmatched with a young debutante,

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