The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

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For everyone who live in America, the ideas of American Dream is something they always want to achieved. But for Fitzgerald, American Dream is impossible to made it become true or even you do, you still have to give up something in order to get it. In The Great Gatsby, the readers learned that Gatsby’s goal is to have Daisy back. Despite everything he owns, including the huge amounts of money and an incredible mansion, for Gatsby, Daisy represents his ideas about money and by having her back, his life will complete. Unfortunately, Gatsby never has Daisy back even he has give up his life for her. Just like Fitzgerald, 59 percent of Americans now believe the American Dream is unachievable. Most of the reason why people believed the American …show more content…

She and her husband has rely on food stamps and government aid, which as Joan says, "is depressing as hell." Joann says she has applied for at least 300 jobs. Even though she can barely afford gas, she drives to the interviews only to learn that the employers want to hire younger candidates at low wages. Like Joan, million of American are suffer to find a job. If American Dream is the idea that everyone can achieve success through hard work, than for these people, it just a dream they never have. A relationship build not base on love but materialism doesn’t bring any happy for you. One example for this relationship is Tom and Daisy. According to the book, the most important reason why Daisy married Tom is his money and status. Tom is a rich man and can give Daisy everything she needs. Their wedding ceremony already prove this. “In June she married Tom Buchanan of Chicago with more pomp and circumstance than Louisville ever knew before. He came down with a hundred people in four private cars and hired a whole floor of the Seelbach Hotel, and the day before the wedding he gave her a string of pearls valued at three hundred and fifty thousand dollars”(Fitzgerald

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