Similarities Between Willy Loman And The Great Gatsby

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Natasha Kwek
Professor Kevin Riordan
HL2029 American Modernism
11 April 2016
Fraud to Funeral: Death of an American Dream
When analysed as separate entities with regards to the collective theme of the American Dream, The Great Gatsby and Death of a Salesman ostensibly serve as a cautionary tale towards those who believe that this Dream can become a reality. However, the two texts offer a contending case that resist the idea that the American Dream is dead, when placed in juxtaposition. In The Epic of America, James Truslow Adams defined the American Dream as “that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement... not a dream of motor cars and high wages” (214). The two protagonists of the texts, Jay Gatsby and Willy …show more content…

In fact, characters’ pursuits of the American Dream are rooted in fraud and dishonesty. As such, I propose that the two characters only fail because they deviate from the true consciousness of the American Dream as asserted by Adams, by redefining this ideology and perverting the quest with their fraudulent nature. In comparing similarities of the two characters, this essay will account for the relevant downfalls - both literal and metaphorical deaths, providing sufficient testimony to how a lack of moral integrity and misinterpretation can kill an ‘American Dream’.
REDEFINITION OF THE AMERICAN DREAM
The Great Gatsby primarily sets its parameters around Jay Gatsby’s obsession with winning Daisy’s heart, and while Death of a Salesman’s Willy Loman carries a different purpose of gaining material prosperity, both protagonists have unrealistic expectations of the American Dream. Willy’s and Jay’s conception of the American Dream

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