Expretation Of The American Dream

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1. Give an outline of how the American Dream is interpreted in texts 2, 3 and 4.
The three texts address the same theme, that being the American Dream and their interpretation and their opinions on it are quite different. The American Dream in text 2 is interpreted very cheerfully and motivationally. The author, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s intention to write this text seems to be, that he wants to motivate people, so they start believing that they can do something great with yourself by serving the nation and helping people. It is based on his own success with it. Text 3 discusses whose American Dream it is, and whether or not we still can use the same idea of the traditional American Dream, because is it just about the materialistic things? It …show more content…

It actually is not certain whether the grass i.e. the circumstances, get better or worse. In text 1 there is this question: “Were the immigrants who came to the United States looking for their bit of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, their dream?” This question is asked after the definition of the American Dream is presented from the United States’ Declaration of Independence. The answer to the question is either way, yes. A lot of immigrants do come to the United States to achieve success and live a better life, but that doesn’t mean that it’s every immigrants dream. Depends on who you are because if you’re from a poor environment back home you’ll typically have the mentality that money grows on trees here and in this process they often forget that you have to go through a lot of hard work and struggles. Recently I read an article some weeks ago where a girl had written about her parents that they lived like kings and queens back home and lived with their whole family so if any critical or financial situation occurred you could always fall back on the family. Some years later they got the chance to come to America, to the land of opportunities. They were convinced that their children would have a better life, receive a better education and become so much more on foreign soil than they could ever be on native land. So they took the chance and left everything behind only later to realize that the American Dream were a living nightmare. And at that time a lot of immigrants were dismissed as uneducated even though they had high degrees such as doctors and engineers back home. So they literally had to start from scratch and take the low wage occupations. But even then, they were deemed as illiterate because English wasn’t their first language. They were viewed as peculiar because of their clothing of choice and culture. They were

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