Two american Dreams
In The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, many themes are enclosed; the most salient of these themes is related to the American Dream. The American Dream is based on the idea that any person, no matter what they are, can become successful in life by his or her hard work. The dream also embodies the idea of a self-sufficient person, an entrepreneur making it successful for themselves. The Great Gatsby is about what happened to the American Dream during the 1920s, an era when the dream had been corrupted by the relentless pursuit of wealth. In this novel, the pursuit of the American Dream and the pursuit of a romantic dream are the ultimate causes of the downfall of the book's title character, Jay Gatsby. Throughout the story, Jay Gatsby avoids telling the truth of his hard, unglamorous childhood. He does this to keep his superficial image of himself and to save himself from the embarrassment of being in a state of poverty during his youth. His parents were lazy and unsuccessful people who worked on the farm, and because of this Gatsby never really accepted them as his parents. Jay Gatsby's real name is James Gatz and he is from the very unexciting North Dakota. He changed his name to Jay Gatsby when he was seventeen years old
" These few comments shattered Gatsby's self-identity because of it's fragileness (Way 99). Gatsby's true sources to richness were selling bootleg liquor in his chain of drug stores and creating a giant business to get rid of and sell stolen Liberty bonds (Mizener 188). He initially loved Daisy because of her extraordinary house and because many other men had been with her already. Their month of love was physically ended when Gatsby had to go to war, but their emotional love never ended. The beginning of the downfall of Gatsby's dream occurs when Tom suspects that Daisy is cheating on him with Gatsby. She could care less about what happens to anyone except for herself. She wanted her love to be their with her, she needed some assurance that she was doing the right thing. Gatsby and Daisy keep on driving and they act like nothing ever happened. Although Gatsby's romantic dream was already dead, his version of the American Dream was still alive and beaming. It is at this moment, when the dream that he has strived for is right in front of him, that he realizes that Daisy isn't as perfect as he imagined her to be. Gatsby's death is made even more saddening at his funeral.
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