Winter Dreams Essays

  • Despair and Alienation in The Snows of Kilimanjaro and Winter Dreams

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Kilimanjaro and Winter Dreams While some readers enjoy the genre of mysteries, others enjoy romance or westerns. But for some people the tragic tales of someone’s despair and alienation from someone or something they love is just what they want to read about. Ernest Hemingway’s styles have evolved throughout his career and I feel The Snows of Kilimanjaro represents the ideas of a man who is greatly in despair and alienated. As well, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s writing of Winter Dreams portray a sense

  • The Observation of the American Dream in Winter Dreams

    617 Words  | 2 Pages

    desired was beyond me, but it is just that, a dream. Freud would reassure you that this dream really meant that I had a desire to migrate or get away, this leads me to wonder what he would say about the American Dream. The American Dream is explained as the desire to be rich and look beautiful doing it, to live forever but never age, to be successful for effort not race. Fitzgerald was able to capture the inner voice of the American Dream in Winter Dreams. As you read about Dexter, the main character

  • Comparing My Antonia And Winter Dreams

    956 Words  | 2 Pages

    The American Dream has been a major foundation of American culture. The American Dream is considered to be the belief that everyone can obtain a better life and that their dreams and goals can be achieved, regardless of any circumstance or social class. It is a very common idea for everyone, but it is something that is viewed in various ways. In Willa Cather’s “My Antonia” and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “Winter Dreams,” both authors compare the idea of success based on wealth and social relations. Both

  • Winter Dreams

    1353 Words  | 3 Pages

    Fitzgerald Essay- Prompt 5 Money may be able to buy ones happiness but not necessarily satisfaction in life. Fitzgerald's characters in “Winter Dreams” and Great Gatsby had money, but not satisfaction throughout their life. One can have satisfying materials, do satisfying things, and obtain satisfying qualities. Characters in “Winter Dreams” and Three of the most satisfying materials that a person could own is a home, money, and a car. At least one of these items is essential for a person no matter

  • Winter Dreams And The American Dream

    517 Words  | 2 Pages

    “Research Paper: Winter Dreams” In “Winter Dreams”, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Dexter’s dream can be related to the American Dream, but Fitzgerald represents it negatively, basically saying that the reality is the American Dream can never be reached. F. Scott Fitzgerald's life is a tragic example of both sides of the American Dream; the joys of young love, wealth and success, and the tragedies associated with excess and failure which shows through in this story (F. Scott). The American Dream is what every

  • Foreshadowing In Winter Dreams

    824 Words  | 2 Pages

    Empty Dreams In the book Winter Dreams by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the main character, Dexter Green, chases unattainable ambitions of success, wealth, and the “ideal” woman. Throughout the book Dexter struggles with his ever changing, empty dreams. Although at first glance the reader might assume Dexter is solely trying to pursue the ideal woman, Judy Jones, a more in depth look reveals that through the attempt to obtain Judy’s affection, Dexter is trying to achieve the greater symbol she represents

  • Gatsby

    560 Words  | 2 Pages

    First and foremost of all are the issues of the materialistic concerns of the rich. Jay Gatsby, a young rich bachelor, had so many personnel possessions because he wanted Daisy, the first love of his life, so much that she was the equivalent of ³Winter Dreams² to him. Gatsby¹s silk shirts being tossed over his head out of his dresser is a good example of how his money means nothing to him and how he would give it all away to have Daisy. Also his eccentric cars were the center of attention because of

  • Analysis Of Winter Dreams

    1224 Words  | 3 Pages

    Winter Dreams Analysis To divorce an adored wife for a woman who will undoubtedly never love back seems unreal and comfortless. But for Dexter Green, in “Winter Dreams,” by F. Scott Fitzgerald, this will become a heartless reality. Dexter Green makes it his most important goal to capture the love of a beautiful young woman. However, the girl has no interest in having a long-term, serious relationship with Dexter. Dexter will, unfortunately, find out the hard way that his goal will be fulfilled under

  • Winter Dreams Sparknotes

    630 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the short story “Winter Dreams” was set in Minnesota where love is about to take a turn. In the short story winter dreams, Dexter Green, son of the owner of the second-best grocery store in Black Bear, Minnesota. The spring begins to thaw and the first golfers brave the course. Dexter imagines beating the golf club’s most esteemed members. At work, he walks into Judy Jones, who, attended by her harbor, asks Dexter to carry her clubs. Dexter can’t leave his post, and Judy gets angry and tries to

  • Analysis Of Winter Dreams And The American Dream

    1337 Words  | 3 Pages

    of the American Dream has dominated American Literature. The overall idea of the American Dream is that every United States citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work, determination, and initiative. “Winter Dreams” by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about the realization of the true desire of the American Dream including status, wealth, and ability and the realization it is realistically unattainable. A myth associated with the American Dream is that even the

  • Winter Dreams Research Paper

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    Winter Dreams There are many ways in which “Winter Dreams” is like and unlike a fairytale. “Winter Dreams” had the potential to have a fairy tale ending. Beginning the story, F. Scott Fitzgerald made the story seem predictable. The reader would have predicted a happy ending like a fairytale. An ending where the ambitious young man gets the beautiful girl of his dreams. Sadly, the story doesn’t end that way. The story had many similarities and differences considering the plot, atmosphere, tone

  • Winter Dreams Book Report

    827 Words  | 2 Pages

    consideration reading the short story Winter Dreams by F.Scott Fitzgerald. Published in 1922, this story is about a magnificent dream of a middle class boy named Dexter wanting to grow up to be apart of the wealthy class and participate in their world. While chasing after his dream, he attached it to a woman whom was in a superior wealth class named Judy Jones. In the end of the story Dexter is talking to a man named Devlin. Dexter figures out officially that his dream was over and it wasn't just losing

  • Winter Dreams Literary Analysis

    596 Words  | 2 Pages

    Winter Dreams follows the life of Dexter Green as he pursues wealth and societal affluence in the hopes of winning the love and affection of Judy Jones, a spoiled socialite from a wealthy family who he first met when he was an adolescent while caddying at an exclusive golf club. As a result of this meeting and the embarrassment he felt in his role as a mere caddie; Dexter makes the irrational decision to quit his caddying job and begin his quest for upper-class social status. The author recapitulates

  • Analysis Of Illusion In Winter Dreams

    1148 Words  | 3 Pages

    Analysis of Illusion in Winter Dreams How far should someone have to go in order to impress someone in whom he or she is interested? At a young age it is instilled for one to be himself or herself and never to allow anyone or anything to change him or her or make him or her forget their morals. It could be inferred that as children, we are taught this, because with the changing of ourselves only to impress another could soon lead to unhappiness or emotional instability within oneself. In F. Scott

  • Literary Analysis Of Winter Dreams

    1256 Words  | 3 Pages

    F. Scott Fitzgerald. A man to revolutionize the way we look at modernism and the dream all americans have. The short story “Winter Dreams” by Fitzgerald is about a young man by the name of Dexter that falls in love with a young rich women by the name of judy. Judy is made of old money whereas Dexter has always worked to make the money he has to be in the same “social class” as Judy. Although Dexter has the money to hang out with those people he is still left out in most parts of the story. Judy cheats

  • Winter Dreams And The Great Gatsby

    554 Words  | 2 Pages

    In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Short Story, “Winter Dreams”, he suggests that the American Dream is a desire for glittery things. On the concept of the American Dream that a person’s success depends more on his or her efforts than on factors such as class or race. Dexter wanted to have the glittery things, but he didn’t want or need them as badly as Judy because he wasn’t raised in the same environment. He felt that he didn’t like Judy at first because she has the glittery things. Once she mature and

  • Winter Dreams Relationship Analysis

    2171 Words  | 5 Pages

    which made them all very relatable, for me, as the reader. Furthermore, there was a very notable dynamic in all of the relationships in these past five weeks. I will commence with the relationship of Dexter and Judy from the story, Winter Dreams by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Their relationship had a very inimitable dynamic to say the least. Dexter was most certainly smitten by Judy. He was It was quite evident throughout the story that Harry did in fact respect his wife Helen; however, his

  • The American Dream In F. Scott Fitzgerald's Winter Dreams

    1853 Words  | 4 Pages

    responsibilities to pursue their own pleasure” (23). An American who reached for opulence himself, F. Scott Fitzgerald observed these realties first hand. In his short stories, “Winter Dreams” and “The Diamond as Big as the Ritz,” Fitzgerald expresses the emptiness of the wealthy and criticizes the popular obsession with the American Dream in the 1920s. Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1896 into a reasonably affluent

  • Comparison of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby and “Winter Dreams”

    952 Words  | 2 Pages

    The short story of “Winter Dreams” was written around the same time that Fitzgerald was developing ideas for a story to turn into a novel. While The Great Gatsby wasn’t published until 1925, “Winter Dreams” débuted in 1922 and the similarities between the novel and short story were done on purpose. “Winter Dreams” became a short draft which Fitzgerald paralleled The Great Gatsby after, but also differentiated the two in specific ways (“Winter Dreams” 217). The main characters are both men, Jay Gatsby

  • The American Dream In F. Scott Fitzgerald's Winter Dreams

    1955 Words  | 4 Pages

    The concept of the American dream has been related to everything from religious freedom to a nice home in the suburbs. It has inspired both deep satisfaction and disillusioned fury. The phrase elicits for most Americans a country where good things can happen. However, for many Americans, the dream is simply unattainable. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s “Winter Dreams,” Dexter Green, a hardworking young man born into the middle class, becomes wrapped up in his pursuit to obtain wealth and status in his