American literature reflects the issues and values of American culture. Two themes of the cultural that appear in multiple works of America are The American Dream and Freedom. Both of these themes play a big role in the books and novels such as The Great Gatsby, Mice & Men, & The Crucible. The American Dream is represented in many novels, but one that stuck out the most was in The Great Gatsby. In the novel, after telling the truth about Gatsby, He is known from a small town where he was poor and didn't really have anyone. Then grows up and earns money but still came up from the slums, now working for Dan Cody. Then you get to the story now where he has this amazing mansion and has everything in the world, except one thing… Daisy. You thought …show more content…
Gatsby already lived through his American Dream, but the truth is his American Dream was getting the girl of his dreams which was Daisy. When he first met Daisy, He was a soldier going off to war and the second he laid eyes on her, he fell in love with her. But sadly he had to leave for war and while he was fighting, Daisy went out and got married to Tom Buchanan. When he sees Nick who is cousins with Daisy, Gatsby is all nice to him and invites him to his party's just so he can get to Daisy. Gatsby wants Daisy to see him and fall in love with him; that would be Gatsby’s American Dream. But, Accidents happen and things take turns and Gatsby ends up dead making his American Dream a failure. The American Dream is also represented in another book called Mice & Men. 2 guys named George and Lennie have to run away from home because Lennie was being chased but angry men because he had angered a Woman by touching her dress. So when they get to the new place they start working and they have to get to know some people. Lennie is a very big and tall and sensitive man he may seem like a grown adult but his mind is like a child's. He is always reminding George of how when they get the money they will own their own Farm with rabbits and bunnies and all these other animals. In the ending George has to end up shooting Lennie behind his back because Lennie had killed Curley's wife. Lennie was just trying to touch her hair and then she started to scream and he snapped her neck by accident, so he ran to the woods where George told him to run if he ever gotten into trouble. George found him in the woods and shot him. this is an example of the American Dream because they did start from the bottom and tried to work their way up and made some money, but it was another failed American Dream because it could not be completed. They never got the house or farm they wanted worth all the animals that they wanted. In The Story Of Mice and Men, freedom to both George and Lennie means settling down.
The life of the open road is only a type of captivity. Do George and Lennie have freedom? Does George have freedom... From Lennie? In the story Lennie's Aunt dies and Lennie is now George's responsibility. Since George now has to care for Lennie, he does not have the freedom to go around and do whatever he wanted to do like before. He now has to care for Lennie because Lennie has a mental sickness. But to Lennie and George, freedom for them is settling down, Lennie is always telling George how he wants to move into a big farm with many different animals, because Lennie like soft animals. The role of Freedom never really plays out in the story for Lennie because he ends up dying by getting shot behind his back by George. But for George, he just may have gotten his freedom back. as soon as he shot Lennie of course he was sad about it, but now he doesn't have to worry about Lennie and what he's doing and where he is and who he hurt. George can go out and be his own man and finally get his own place and not have to worry about anyone …show more content…
else. The role of Freedom also plays in a book called The Crucible.
In the story some people used the witch hunts to free themselves of their sins by blaming false accusations on the innocent victims. At the time of Salem witch hunts people were beginning to explore a greater individual Freedom that they had not had until then. when the witch hunts arrived the people who were beginning to explore this were accused of being a witch because they were seen as abnormal. John Proctor one of the main characters dies with freedom and honor as he knew his sins had been forgiven by his wife and he forgave himself. Those who have been hanged also died with freedom as they refuse to lie to save their lives as it goes against the Ten Commandments which feature heavily in The Crucible. The people who hang seem to be the only people who will be the Ten Commandments in the play. So what type of freedom is
that? All together, The Great Gatsby and Mice & Men showed the idea of The American Dream behind their stories and they really did explain them very well. How in Gatsby It shows how he was in fact already living the American Dream by living from poor and working his way up to rich. But his personal American Dream was to get Daisy which never actually ended up happening because he was shot by George. And then in Mice & Men how both Lennie and George wanted to buy their own big farm with lots of land and soft animals. The Idea of Freedom was shown in Mice & Men again as well as The Crucible. In Mice & Men, They never actually had their freedom because they were either always working or on the run because of something Lennie did. George however did get his freedom after he shot Lennie behind his back because Lennie was no longer his responsibility. In The Crucible, Everyone of those 10 people including John Proctor who got hung got their freedom and were living good lives. John even settled everything out with his wife and everything was okay until the girl messed it up and it ended up costing him and several others their lives.
A society naturally breaks up into various social groups over time. Members of lower statuses constantly suppose that their problems will be resolved if they gain enough wealth to reach the upper class. Many interpret the American Dream as being this passage to high social status and, once reaching that point, not having to concern about money at all. Though, the American Dream involves more than the social and economic standings of an individual. The dream involves attaining a balance between the spiritual strength and the physical strength of an individual. Jay Gatsby, of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, fails to reach his ultimate dream of love for Daisy in that he chooses to pursue it by engaging in a lifestyle of high class.
The American dream is an idea that every American has an equal chance of success. In the book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald shows us this is not the case. Fitzgerald wrote the character Jay Gatsby as a tragic American hero. Jay Gatsby went from a nobody to a millionaire and most people believe that he had achieved the American dream. However, he did not achieve the American dream because he lost a piece of himself in his pursuit of his supposedly incorruptible dream.
American clothing designer Tommy Hilfiger once said “The road to success is not easy to navigate, but with hard work, drive and passion, it is possible to achieve the American dream.” This idea of the “American dream” has been around since the founding and has become a prominent part of American culture and identity. This same idea is what the raved about novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is based around. Jay Gatsby, the protagonist, pursues this American dream through his pursuit of Daisy Buchanan and his need to be insanely rich.
Imagine. You are sitting in complete silence, even the nearby crickets won't dare to let out even the slightest of croaks. You stare down at your cluttered, dimly lit desk. Your hand grasps your pen, and the other rubs back and forth across your temple in angst. Your eyes pass over each paper, containing each incomplete thought, and your mind floods with memories of your past. Trapped by writer’s block, you are all alone with only your experiences, surroundings, and philosophy aiding you in the fall that is the dark reality of alcoholism and depression. For renowned authors F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway, these influences all played a crucial role in identifying their style techniques, as well as determining similarities and differences
This leaves Gatsby alone with his wealth and no one to share it with. Gatsby's belief in achieving his American Dream through Daisy led to his failure. While the American Dream suggests that everyone can achieve the status and wealth they desire through hard work, Gatsby's newly earned wealth and lifestyle are looked down upon, due to which he desires to be married with Daisy, which can lead to him attaining his dream. The American Dream during the nineteen twenties is portrayed by the author as a dream merely restricted to the attainment of wealth and social class which had consumed many people including Jay Gatsby.
The American Dream is nothing new to world. In 1925 F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote “The Great Gatsby” which was about a man truly living the “American Dream”. Everything he did though was to achieve wealth. He had elaborate parties in his fabulous house, bought the best of everything, and did whatever he had to do become the best. He started out with nothing and worked his way up by creating a fake life, even the woman he loved most did not know of his past. The woman, Daisy, he loved most was not even in Gatsby’s life, but in the life of another man. Gatsby worked and strived to get everything he had for a married woman who did not even love him. Though Gatsby thought he loved Daisy he only loved the idea of her. Someone who he had a few wonderful moments with, someone who he could see his life spent with. What did he really get out of life though? Wasted years to impress someone who never really mattered when he could have been spending it with someone who could of loved him for who he really was. Who was Gatsby though, no one can e...
The American dream today is very different from Gatsby's. The dream today is to have our necessities and to have fun. Many people would like to have a house to call your own, a job you like that pays the bills, and a healthy family. Gatsby's dream was to be wealthy and to find love, which was Daisy. He wanted to be an important person that people remembered. Gatsby thought that his wealth would buy Daisy's love, He tried to buy happiness and become something he wasn't. Even with all of his money he was not ever truly happy until he got Daisy. Gatsby lived his whole life with money and class but in the end he ended up dying because of
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby, he has many references relating to the American Dream, such as, “She only married you because I was poor and she was waiting for me. It was a terrible mistake, but in her heart she never loved anyone except me.” (Fitzgerald 130) This quote is related to the American Dream because Gatsby was once poor before he was wealthy, and he wanted to achieve the American Dream, so ideally, he became wealthy. Throughout The Great Gatsby, Daisy is tied in with being rich, since that is The American Dream for her. For Gatsby, then again, did not accomplish the American Dream through work, but rather by being a Bootlegger, and that is the reason the American
The American Dream is the concept that anyone, no matter who he or she is, can become successful in his or her life through perseverance and hard work. It is commonly perceived as someone who was born and starts out as poor but ambitious, and works hard enough to achieve wealth, prosperity, happiness, and stability. Clearly, Fitzgerald uses Gatsby to personify the destruction of the American Dream Gatsby started out as a poor farming boy, meticulously planning his progression to become a great man. When Gatsby’s father showed Nick the journal where Gatsby wrote his resolution, he says, “Jimmy was bound to get ahead. He always had some resolves like this or something. Do you notice what he 's got about improving his mind?” (182). The written resolution demonstrates how ambitious and innocent Gatsby was in pursuing his dreams and how much he wanted to improve himself that his father applauded him, which once characterized the process of pursuing the American Dream. While pursuing Daisy (Gatsby’s American Dream), Gatsby becomes corrupt and destroys himself. He did not achieve his fortune through honest hard work, but through dishonesty and illegal activities. Furthermore, Gatsby has a large, extravagant mansion, drives flashy cars, throws lavish parties filled with music and
The Great American Dream has been the reason why people work and try their best to move up in life. In the 1920’s, America had finished fighting in World War I, and the economy was booming. Americans were partying, carefree people, and were heavily influenced by fashion. There was a serious change in the lifestyle of hundreds and thousands of people, it was a new way of living. After the stock market crash in 1929, life seemed to be meaningless, and it was too difficult to be someone that was carefree, the Great American Dream became unreachable. In the great American novel, The Great Gatsby, author F. Scott Fitzgerald uses the character Gatsby to demonstrate the difficulty of obtaining the Great American Dream.
The American Dream is a concept in which freedom includes the opportunity for prosperity and success. All of this is achieved through the efficiency of hard work and dedication to reach that dream. People are lured into thinking they can have that dream if they live in America because it is the land of opportunity. The novel The Great Gatsby, is centered around the American Dream and how unachievable it is. Fitzgerald 's novel comments on how bad society is and how people dream unrealistically. The American Dream is hard to attain and hard to keep in any social class. In the novel The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald shows, through Daisy 's dream, Wilson 's dream, and Gatsby 's dream, just how hard it is to obtain and fold on to the American Dream.
The American Dream had always been based on the idea that each person no matter who he or she is can become successful in life by his or her hard work. The dream also brought about the idea of a self-reliant man, a hard worker, making a successful living for him or herself. The Great Gatsby is about what happened to the American Dream in the 1920s, a time period when the many people with newfound wealth and the need to flaunt it had corrupted the dream. The pursuit of the American Dream is the one motivation for accomplishing one's goals, however when combined with wealth the dream becomes nothing more than selfishness.
Within the debate on who is to be crowned the “Great American Novel,” a valid factor that may be taken into consideration is how ideals in culture become altered with an evolving environment, and therefore, the argument can be made on the behalf of The Great Gatsby to be considered for the title. Due to its more recent ideological concepts, the novel addresses American ideals that are not fully developed or addressed at all within The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. These ideals can be boiled down to primarily two concepts: the fully-developed American dream of richness and upper-class goals, and consumerism in the industrialization of America. While Mark Twain’s piece touches on the “American dream” with Huck beginning the book off with $6,000
How does American literature shape American culture? America, a baby nation compared to many other countries, has shaped itself into one of the most politically and technically advanced places in the world. The definition of American Literature is any literary work written in, or about The United States. The Great Gatsby, The Scarlet Letter, The Narrative of the Life of Fredric Douglass and various other works of literature are all pieces of American literature that have helped shape American society.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Glass Menagerie by Tennessee Williams share and explore themes and techniques of imprisonment, by both mental and physical means. To explore imprisonment, both writers use characters and narration techniques to express themes of illusion and reality by characterisation, the American Dream in symbolism, and entrapment by responsibility through narration structure. While both authors express a story, Tennessee Williams uses play direction, while F. Scott Fitzgerald uses novel structure to convey the ideas of imprisonment.