Why Is The American Dream Important In The Great Gatsby

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Key Factor of the Dream
During the Roaring Twenties, people achieved the “new” American dream through wealth, success, and emotional fulfillment. Back in the colonial period our former fathers wrote equality, life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness at the end of The Declaration of the Independence to advertise the American dream. In the novel The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald writes about the new lifestyle that the people inhabits to achieve the American dream. Fitzgerald grew up in a poor lower class society, but because of his backbreaking work and dedication he got viewed as a symbol of social mobility because of his social mobility he achieved his American dream. In Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby he points out how wealth, success, and emotional fulfillment advertised the American dream.
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In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald portraits Daisy as the American dream. Jay Gatsby son of a poor farmer, who meets Daisy Fay during his enrollment for WWI, after the war he attends Oxford College. While at Oxford he receives a letter from Daisy saying that she has married Tom Buchanan. Gatsby then commits his life on become a rich higher-class man hoping to win Daisy’s affection. Gatsby has been spending the last 5 years to win Daisy affection with his wealth; this shows that for Gatsby, Daisy advertised his American dream “I think he half expected her to wonder into one of his parties, some night, …he says he’s read a Chicago paper for years on the chance of catching a glimpse of Daisy’s name”(Fitzgerald 79) Gatsby does everything to fulfill his dream, but he dose not achieve it while trying to reach his dream his life meets a sorrowful