Great Gatsby And Death Of A Salesman Essay

Words: 762
Pages: 4

In the “Death of a Salesman “ by Arthur Miller and “ Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald we have been presented to the tragedy of ruined idealism. How Willy Loman's and Jay Gatsby's dreams were crushed because of their tremendous desire to be successful and important. However, their social status, lineage, and ability to accept the reality were incompatible with their dreams. Miller provides the facts that capitalism will not give a chance to an ordinary people to get an American dream, and as well as Fitzgerald designates that the American dream is impossible. Kimberly Hearn in her journal article « Fitzgerald Rendering of a dream» asserted that the American dream is beautiful yet grotesquely flawed and distorted. No …show more content…
Even if we imagine that the desire of happiness in the social interpretation, the desire to become a great man, the happiness visibly correlated with the social respect level. In the last instance, it is inextricably linked to the level of income. Capitalism didn't give Loman a chance to succeed, he is not a part of wealthy society where he can show the white card and smile. «Through the “photograph of a man of action,” Fitzgerald negatively implies (via Nick’s observations) that Americans are pretentious; we rely on images instead of reality to the point that “reality [has become] an endangered concept in American society” We speak of equality and unlimited possibilities, but in reality both are illusions» (191). Firstly, there is no equal opportunity for the simple reason that people are not equal from birth. Someone will have a lifetime running for the piece and still be aside from the society. This is a problem of choice of life , the dream is not enough. Great American Dream - is also an illusion and the illusion of selling.Willie builds castles in the air, he tells his wife how much his friends respected him as many dollars a week he makes. And then it turns out that his real earnings below the weekly loan