The American land is a correspondent with freedom, the history of thousands of years of immigration, the folk ubiquity of the world come to this land for freedom and The American Dream. Then what is the American Dream? For some folk it is about opportunity, education, stability, and prosperity; for others, it is about status, possession, appearance, and recognition. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about a young man with his dream and evidence of an achievable American Dream, born in poverty, and rose to the top of the social pyramid.
The author’s purpose was to represent the American Dream through the lives of Jay Gatsby. The American dream is achievable but unattainable because of greed.
The American dream is achievable and is stereotypical description of the immigrant people for better lives, but in this situation: Gatsby a white man who is a man grew in poverty in the 1920 and always desires change, left home on a journey from the heir of a billionaire, to empty-handed, become an officer, met his love, leave for war, an Oxford man, and came back to be a man on every newspaper and top of the social pyramid. He said “If it wasn’t for the mist we would see your home across the bay…. You always have a green light that burns all night at the end of your dock” (Fitzgerald 92). The desire to be close to Daisy Buchanan is his motivation and the green light emblematizes the American Dream. Albeit his motivation of love he also desired for assets and ambition to sacrifice dignity and integrity to achieve the dream.
“Her voice is full of money,” he said suddenly” (Fitzgerald 120). This quote expresses that he saw Daisy Buchanan as a possession, property, he craved for her and desire to pursue his dream. Gatsby is an example of desire and love that can make The .
In another aspect of Gatsby’s life, he shows that The American Dream is achievable but at the same time not attainable if one is too greedy. Gatsby already achieved what he needed, but as his achievement went further, he began to be insurmountable what was not his and was too fatuous to give up. “If that was true he must have felt that he had lost the old warm world, paid a high price for living too long with a single dream.” (Fitzgerald 161). Consequently, Gatsby’s greed brought him nothing but an unattainable American Dream, lonely, pain. Nevertheless, he lived in his imaginary world and was stubborn to turn as the reality shifted.
The American dream comes in a different mindset. Nick Carraway and Jay Gatsby are examples of this. Nick is a white man born into a wealthy family, he has what it takes to live a lavish life and so- called the American’s American dream, which means that he can desire power, status. Conversely, Nick craved a stable life of ordinary. He stated: “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy – they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated into their money or their vast carelessness… (Fitzgerald 162). Nick is contemptuous of people like Tom and Daisy Buchanan, but folk like the Buchanan family are the epitome of Gatsby. Gatsby craved for what Tom had, and he overdrawn, greedy and led to destruction of himself. The conclusion is the American Dream is defined differently for each individual but don’t exaggerate the dream.
Upon the multiple perspectives of the American Dream achievable, but greed is an obstacle to maintain the American Dream. Gatsby lived in the 1920s which in that time period lacked opportunity, but he still succeeded, so this is evident that the American Dream is achievable. Furthermore, The American dream lasts throughout decades of history, but society claims The American is gone long ago. Then what will reality and next generation claims be?