Great Gatsby in F. Scott Term Paper

Total Length: 359 words ( 1 double-spaced pages)

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With enough wealth amassed and an impressive mansion right across the Sound from hers, Jay Gatsby feels certain that he can "repeat the past" when Daisy had loved him.

The American Dream is different for other characters in the novel. For Daisy, it appears to be maintaining the status quo by marrying someone in her social set. Tom Buchanan probably feels the same way. For Nick Carraway, the saddened narrator of the story, the American Dream is more elusive. His feelings that people should not be criticized because they have not had all the opportunities other people have had would appear to echo the American idea of equality.
His disgust at the shameless pursuit of wealth and the actions of the wealthy suggest that a dream of simply becoming rich is not a dream worth pursuing.

The failed result of Gatsby's re-creation and the disgust with which Nick Carraway leaves the novel suggests that the American Dream has limited potential to create happiness......

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"Great Gatsby In F Scott" (2006, December 11) Retrieved May 4, 2024, from
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"Great Gatsby In F Scott" 11 December 2006. Web.4 May. 2024. <
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"Great Gatsby In F Scott", 11 December 2006, Accessed.4 May. 2024,
https://www.aceyourpaper.com/essays/great-gatsby-f-scott-41017