Examples Of Continuity In The Great Gatsby

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Continuity of the Dream The American dream is a goal of all Americans though it is only truly achieved by a small percentage of the population. The American dream has a long history of inspiring people and changing lives. Certain decades have felt this inspiration more than others and certain factions of people have had varying levels of success in their ability to achieve the dream. In the eighteenth century the founding fathers penned a document so influential effected future generations of Americans but the world as a whole. These brave men put their lives on the line and fought for independence and the freedom of their children. Nearly two centuries later in the 1950s the “greatest generation” had just returned from their own war and their drive for family and better lives fueled what is now known as the ‘ baby boom’ and the prosperous times of the 1950s. Around the same time, in the fictional world of Loraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin in the Sun” the Younger family overcame poverty to move there family forward. This fictional scenario stands as a prime example of the American dream. The Youngers move there family forward. This is the …show more content…
Scot Fitzgerald’s fictional world of “The Great Gatsby” the fictional Gats family lives the dream. Jay Gatsby’s parents were poor and their son rose out of it to wealth. They lived the dream through the success of their son. Jay Gatsby rose out of poverty to live in a house that was “colossal affair by any standard… with a tower on one side, spanking new under a thin beard of raw ivy, and a marble swimming pool, and more than forty acres of lawn and garden” (Fitzgerald 21) Gatsby was very successful and although his premature death prevented him from helping the next generation he did affectively live the dream in reverse. When Gatsby achieved his riches he then went back to help his parents financial. Gatsby’s father recalled, “He come out to see me two years ago and bought me the house I live in now” (Fitzgerald