An Inquiry on the American Dream

1172 Words3 Pages

The American dream has been a tangible idea, greatly sought after by many over the course of American History. The dream has eluded many, to strive for achieving in America’s open markets, and become a self-made man from the sweat of one’s brow. The idea of become self-sufficient, and have limitless dreams that take one as far as they are willing to imagine is captured very differently from The Great Gatsby to A Raisin in the Sun. Both novels seem to have the American dream as their subject, but both end up having very different outcomes to how one achieves it, and if the dream is truly in existence, namely with the characters of Jay Gatsby and Walter Younger. The books mainly brushes upon the idea of what the American dream truly is, how one achieves the dream, and what the real fulfillment the dream encompasses.
The basis of the founding of America came from the ideal that there should be not aristocratic class, one who unfairly takes taxes from the hardworking, and all efforts of success from those who pursue it. Early America was founded on such ideals like that, and the ideals appealed to those being oppressed in other nations and countries. The basis of the American dream that a man is entitled to what they earn, and they are free to do what they want with what they have earned. Gatsby pursued this dream in a different way from what most would think, as in, not for his own self-interests, but for the interest of another person, being Daisy. Gatsby pursued a life of wealth and fortune so that he could win Daisy over, and with that he tirelessly put himself forth working hard, earning all of the money himself. The reader then hears that the way Gatsby got his money is ambiguous, people at parties claiming he was a German spy...

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The end result of both these novels shows the tragedy that can occur to everyday people, even if they didn’t do anything wrong. The American Dream made the fantasies of the men of the novels strive to attain it, but in the end the dreams of both the men ultimately destroyed them. Both Fitzgerald and Hansberry wrote these books not only for the intention to merely entertain people, but also to entice the reader into a thought, and question how things happen in the world. Both Realist authors embarked a rapid departure from the Romantic Movement, writing a novel that conveys to the reader what truly happens to people, and try to show the true pragmatism of the real world. Both authors write in tangent about the American dream, and both put forth the question of if it actually exists, and concluding from their very cynical novels, it truly does not.

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