How Does The American Dream Relate To The Great Gatsby

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Nick represents a desire for moral maturity and spiritual maturity, representing traditional moral norms. He was Daisy's distant cousin, Tom's college classmate, and gatsby's neighbor and friend, and Jordan baker's lover. I was within and without. He found out that the driver was Daisy, not gatsby. After gatsby's death, he helped him with his affairs. Gatsby had a misplaced faith in materialism, and he mistakenly believed that as long as he was materially rich, he could pursue love and have everything he wanted, so that he could enjoy freedom and beauty. He's actually the embodiment of Platonic idealism. The pursuer of the American dream. Daisy and gatsby were the first lovers. Nick was his neighbor. So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past. …show more content…

But he was unable to change his poor state of existence, and he had to struggle between illusion and reality. At the same time, the American dream is a far cry from the original American dream. At that time, the United States advocated the supremacy of money and hedonism. Gatsby's "American dream" also changed. He later fell in love with Daisy. Although she was born with a rich family, Daisy was vulgar and shallow. She had no ideal, no sentiment, no pursuit. She only had the highest goal in her life, and she did not even have the sincerity of her mother. Daisy is Tom’s wife. She was Gatsby’s first lover. She was Nick’s relative. I love you but also love Tom. You always look so cool. Daisy's car killed Tom's mistress, martel, but she never had the courage to admit that she was the perpetrator, and she was on the road when her husband married gatsby and gatsby was

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