The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

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A fleeting glimpse of the Statue of Liberty was all they saw of the ‘Land of the Free’ as the steamboat eased its way to Ellis Island. Single mothers and fathers, ambitious youths, deadbeats, and whole families flocked to New York City hoping to change their fortunes. Fast forward a hundred years. Now, their first glimpse of The City comes from thousands of feet in the air as they fly towards their final destination. The Statue of Liberty continues to hold its eternal flame high into the sky, symbolizing the hundreds of years of American sweat and tears that built this country. From the airplane, they see the sun’s rays reflecting off the city’s skyscrapers and lighting the path to the bright future ahead. They seem to bubble over with great …show more content…

However, do these dramatic headlines hold any truth? Newspapers and the media propagate this message of doom by calling for Americans to wake up from their “American Dream” and face the cruel reality of American life. However, for immigrants both past and present, the American Dream has motivated and continues to motivate millions to come to America. The term “American Dream” was first publicly defined in 1931 by James Truslow Adams in The Epic of America, in which he defines the dream as the “dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement” (Adams 16). Despite the hopeful message the original definition conveys, the modern American Dream has been more recently defined in terms of excessive financial success rather than hope for a “better life.” This misinterpretation of the Dream results its negative perception in today’s society. When analyzing the modern American Dream using Adams’ original definition, the Dream is not only surviving, but thriving. Since the inception of the phrase, the American Dream has served and continues to serve as the ultimate beacon of hope for the hopeless and distraught while also remaining the fundamental key to American

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