America 's dream is life, it is an ideal everyone pursues in life. Its meaning and hope lies in finding success, wealth and power through independence and self-determination. Purchasing a house, owning an item, and living a slow life all evolved into the reality of American dreams. In "Great Gatsby", Fitzgerald's depiction of American dreams is seen as a system pursued by wealth, greed, self, which compromises the good and authority of people and society. Faith and morality
F. In Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby" almost all characters pursue America's dream. This is a dream of prosperity, opportunity, and equality, and all American members have the opportunity to achieve success. According to the American Declaration of Independence 1776, ... - Fitzgerald told his friends that the women are so weak that they are really emotionally unstable - as they are nervous their tension .. This is a male world All wise ladies are in line with male leadership. '(Car 406). The recognition of this woman played an important role in the development of characters in Gatsby. Gatsby's lady is depicted as weak and independent from her husband, but unless you rely on her husband, it's obvious that the trouble is always late.
In his work "The Great Gatsby", F. Scott Fitzgerald used this character in a fictitious village, West Egg, in Long Island in the summer of 1922. He is focused on Jay Gatsby, a wealthy gentleman who is passionate and crazy about Daisy Buchanan. In this book, topics of idealism, decadence, social unrest, and resistance to change are being explored that create a portrait of the jazz era, which is described as a story about American dreams. In this article I will summarize the contrasting features between "Great Gatsby" and a real American dream. It explains whether American dreams are still being followed up to the end of American citizen's real life.
F. Scott Fitzgerald 's "Great Gatsby" is considered one of his greatest achievements in American literature. Many of Fitzgerald's works are studying the only dream of American glory and wealth in the jazz era (Poupard, Person 146). "Critics agree that the great Gatsby is" a mere chronicle in the American era and the continued popularity of this novel is fascinated by the dreams of modern American-American people. " In the book, Fitzgerald uses Gatsby to compare the achievements of the American society of the 1920s and the true American dreamer. In the 1920 's, the United States could not realize that dream, and could not reveal the blindness of America' s jazz era. "Great Gatsby is an American dream quest because it exists in the era of corruption, and it tries to identify hidden boundaries that separate reality from fancy." (Bewley 38)