Abstract This essay discusses how the "Americandream" is one of individual liberty, prosperity, success, and equal inclusion. Some Americans have been able to make the dream come true. Others have been less fortunate. The paper demonstrates how American industries and the United States government helped individuals and groups to turn the dream into reality in the period 1896 to 1932. Nonetheless, because of inequality, many Americans were excluded from the dream.
Abstract This paper takes a look at the illusion and possible failure of the so called AmericanDream as portrayed in 'The Great Gatsby' by F. Scott Fitzgerald, 'Death of a Salesman' by Arthur Miller and 'Wall Street ' by Oliver Stone. These literary works bring the fallacy of this AmericanDream to the attention of it's audience.
From the Paper "The American Dream forms a basic part of our cultural mythos in the United States and is evident in a large number of literary works and artistic productions. Sometimes the authors in question unintentionally imbue their writing with overtones of the American Dream. Other times, a piece of literature actively calls attention to the precepts of the American Dream, either holding it up as an ideal or deconstructing the contradictions inherent in that particular ideology. In examining three literary productions (even though one is a film), we see that the American Dream is often interpreted as a fallacy. In F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, Arthur Miller's Death of a Salesman, and Oliver Stone's Wall Street this theme is brought to the forefront of the discussion of American ideological construction."
Abstract The paper compares the Americandream to O'Neill's "Long Day's Journey into Night" and Benjamin Franklin's "Way to Wealth" to Miller's "Death of a Salesman." The paper describes definitions of the Americandream as expressed by playwrights Miller & O'Neill.
From the Paper "The American Dream: The American dream is defined differently by various generations, racial and ethnic groups and other subgroups within society. Attempting to determine what constitutes this dream is therefore very complex and the question of what is the American dream can only be answered in generalities."
Tags:Americandream, Long Day's Journey into Night, Death of a Salesman, wealth
Abstract The 'AmericanDream' is the assertion that any individual can become fabulously wealthy and that fabulous wealth, in turn, produces great happiness. It pervades American society and, consequently, American literature. Its thematic impact on The Great Gatsby and "Death of a Salesman" is explored.
Abstract This paper looks at F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" and focuses on how Gatsby's love for Daisy symbolizes the AmericanDream as hollow.
From the Paper "F Scott Fitzgerald's famous novel "The Great Gatsby" is often considered one of the quintessential tales of lost love and social climbing. Indeed Jay Gatsby's quest to win the heart of his beloved Daisy Buchanan once again is fueled by the social advancements ..."
Tags: great gatsby, fitzgerald, american, dream, daisy
Abstract The purpose of this essay is to discuss the evolution of the "AmericanDream" in terms of education, opportunity and socio-economic class. This paper attempts to determine if life has improved or become worse as compared to the last century.
From the Paper "The purpose of this essay is to discuss the evolution of the American Dream in terms of education, opportunity and socio-economic class and determine if life has gotten better or worse than it was in the last century. The American Dream speaks directly to quality of life and the ability to raise our children to have a better life than we had."
Abstract The paper examines "Death of a Salesman," written by Arthur Miller and first performed in 1949, that is often said to be a play about the failure of the AmericanDream. The paper explains that there is some dispute about whether or not the play should be ranked as a tragedy, but most people agree that it deals with the subject of the AmericanDream. The paper considers the argument that the play is indeed about the confusion and pathos of a man and his two sons deluded by the AmericanDream, so that they waste their lives chasing a dream that is not only impossible for them to attain, but in fact not even worth attaining.
Abstract In this article, the writer notes that by the middle of the 19th century, Jefferson's famous expression regarding all men being created equal had become the cornerstone for an ideology known as Manifest Destiny. The bloom of the AmericanDream later wilted, as portrayed by F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'The Great Gatsby', with poisons of immorality into a triangulation of corruption. The writer discusses that both Clinton and Gatsby have chased their own AmericanDream, but in a self-induced state of lies and deceit. The writer notes that Gatsby's future ended short with failure to fulfill his dream, while Clinton's failures have not presently met such drastic conclusions. The writer concludes that from Thomas Jefferson, through the era of triangulation, 'The Great Gatsby' displays how the AmericanDream has withered away as the paths of dishonesty, greed, and corruption are taken in the ultimate pursuit of happiness.
From the Paper "This statement about Gatsby is just as true for Clinton. From the start of his tenure in 1993 until the last days of 2000, President Clinton produced many positive actions and executive orders such as The Family and Medical Leave Act, The Brady Act, and an increased minimum wage. Gatsby also seemed to produce positive events by opening the doors to his mansion to all who would come, with weekly celebrations of food, music, and entertainment.
"With as much weight as constructive actions may carry, some of Clinton's political decisions seemed to diminish any existence of good just as Gatsby's false social and self-promoting pronouncements. On top of the countless lies, Clinton gave a middle-class tax increase, a policy known as ... "
Abstract This paper discusses how, in Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman", the notion of dreams and aspirations is central to the play. More specifically, the paper looks at how, it is the perversion of the Americandream that provides the hinge of the work and how Willy's supreme investment in and subsequent warping of the Americandream ultimately destroys both himself and his family.
From the Paper "In "Act Two" Charley asks Willy "Why must everybody like you?" (p. 97). It is because, more than anything, Willy wishes to be personally successful. He ties this success to the idea of landscape and to the American ideal of the frontier. His job as traveling salesman who is constantly expanding is key: he is always "going west" in search of different land to conquer (i.e. sell to). This spreading out is indicative of his drive to earn more and more wealth, the main component of his view of success. Secondly, he is a salesman; his very job hinges on selling and consuming. In fact he is essentially selling himself every time and his finical survival depends on his ability to sell not just his product, but himself as a provider of that product. It is this absolute reliance on his own self ability that feeds in to the ideals of Willy's American Dream. "
Abstract This paper contends that the Americandream has long been a dream bought on credit, rather than something substantiated in fact. The writer discusses how the current housing crisis and credit crunch has blown this bubble, disproportionately affected minority borrowers, and shown that happiness ought not to be determined by things such as home ownership. Success has been equated with material possessions, and thus having the right material objects becomes an objective determinant of an individual's moral worth. The paper concludes that the Americandream must shift to one of internal, rather than external moral values and take into account the societal, racial, and class injustices that have created the real America today.
From the Paper "While credit card companies are partly to blame by marketing to consumers, like college students, who cannot afford to pay even their minimum monthly payments on large balances, the inability of Americans to differentiate between wants and needs is surely to blame as well. America is a nation with no real aristocracy, rather how much you make and your appearance is seen to determine your wealth as a person. Consider perhaps the paradigmatic American novel, The Great Gatsby, where the central bootlegging character creates an image of himself as a great man by buying a house in the right area of Long Island, and wearing the right clothes."
Abstract This paper explores how the "AmericanDream," an ideology of individualism, supports the objectives of capitalism by perpetuating social inequalities. To expose the mythical nature of this ideology, it examines how the access to educational and occupational opportunities are linked not to ability or hard work, as the "AmericanDream" asserts, but rather that social status is a consequence of cultural capital and ascribed characteristics of race, sex,and class. It also explores how specific institutions and policy regulate and impede social mobility, guaranteeing that the white, male, upper-class retains its power and status at the pinnacle of America's stratified society.
From the Paper "Understandably, some females, non-whites, and poor people, having internalized the individualist ideology, and blame themselves for their inability to achieve the "American Dream." Others, however, have responded by consciously rejecting the dominant culture's ideals in light of their inaccessibility. Resistance theory, pioneered by Bowles and Gintis, is exemplified by such countercultural behaviors as gangs, criminal activity, and other less violent anti-social activities (MacLeod). In Bettie's ethnography, Women without Class, she describes an instance of such behavior by working-class Latina high school students. Eschewing the dominant culture's idealization of femininity as chaste and demure, these girls embrace teenage motherhood within their peer groups as an alternative to academic endeavors. "
Abstract This paper suggests that Arthur Miller's play, "Death of a Salesman" could be viewed as a doctrinal thesis that heavily criticizes democracy and capitalism. The paper analyzes the theme and the main protagonist in the play, Willy Loman, and explains how the play is symbolic of Miller's attempt to combine the motifs of social and personal disintegration with Willy Loman's quest for the "Americandream."
From the Paper "Loman's eventual destruction by his own hand, being his suicide, demonstrates the overall failure of American culture and the failure of his chosen profession as a door-to-door salesman, a job which requires steady nerves and much determination. Miller's concept of Willy Loman as one of millions of American middle-class workers in search of the "American dream" exemplifies the true nature of American society via Loman's inability to realize that such as dream, at least for many Americans, is based on an illusion of great magnitude and depth. Thus, Miller's Death of a Salesman stands as one of the most important plays written in the last sixty years, due to its ability to illuminate "certain values which civilized men in the 20th century share," being the "cruel paradox of human existence" which often inserts "a sense of greater meaning than that conferred upon it by reality" ("Death of a Salesman-Protagonist," Internet)."
Abstract This paper considers how Americans are viewed by those on the outside of the United States. The writer discusses how Americans see themselves. The writer examines what is promised to those living in the United States by history, geography, news or popular culture. In this essay, the writer discusses whether that promise is achievable? The writer also addresses the question whether it needs to be achievable.
From the Paper "In his essay "Selling Our Innocence Abroad" Pico Iyer makes a number of observations about the United States and its place in the world and he reflects on the ongoing attraction of the United States to people around the world. Without doubt, America is still the greatest military power on earth and even if America's economic strength is waning, while the economies of a united Europe are strengthening, Iyer acknowledges that the American economy remains vibrant and American citizens enjoy among the highest standard ... "
Tags: Visons of the AmericanDream: United States, history, geography, news or popular culture, promised by living here. Is that promise achievable? Does it need to be?
Abstract This essay looks at Victorian vs. non-Victorian literature and how each portrays the AmericanDream. Discussed are Kate Chopin's ?The Awakening,? Edith Wharton's ?The Other Two,? Ernest Hemingway's ?The Sun Also Rises,? and Upton Sinclair's ?The Jungle.?
From the Paper "The United States has come to be known as the land of opportunity. It has always had the allure as the one place on earth where empty lives can find fulfillment. This allure has come to be described as the ?American Dream.? Through the decades the American dream has taken many transformations, from being one of simply freedom to practice one's religion to one of desired wealth and riches. Moreover, the dream has had different meanings to each gender. For women, the dream has generally been choices, for men, power. From the Victorian era to the modern era, American literature has shown the changes in the dream. Kate Chopin and Edith Wharton are two examples of female authors that depict the lives and desires of the Victorian era, while authors Upton Sinclair and Ernest Hemingway show the post-Victorian American dream from a masculine perspective."
This paper discusses the idea of the Americandream, pervasive throughout American culture, as first coined by James Truslow Adams in his book, "The Epic of America".
Abstract This paper explains that Adams's AmericanDream focuses on the greater social and political aspects of America, noting the importance of a society-wide effort in creating a better, free, and democratic America. The author points out that, today, many Americans argue that Adam's AmericanDream is simply not achievable by most Americans because of the ugly realities underlying race, gender, and ethnicity, which often bar Americans from achieving their dreams. The paper concludes that perhaps it is not surprising that any culture, no matter how progressive, has had difficulty living up to Adams's high ideals in a time of tremendous cultural and economic changes.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Adams's AmericanDream Defined
The AmericanDream Today
Adams's Beliefs and Today's America
Modern America and the AmericanDream Conclusion
From the Paper "Perhaps the most startling discrepancy between Adams' view of the American dream and the view of the American dream held by modern Americans lies in the area of financial gain. Today, most Americans view the attainment of the American dream in financial terms. The American dream has come to mean a bigger house, a nicer car, and more money to spend on material goods. This view is in stark contrast to Adam's thoughts that the American dreams is "not a dream of motor cars and high wages" (p 404), and that the American dream "can never be wrought into a reality by cheap people or by 'keeping up with Joneses.'""