The Great Gatsby and the Destruction of the American Dream
The Great Gatsby, a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald,
is about the corruption of the American Dream, and the
downfall of those who attempt to attain its illusionary
goals. As the novel shows, the 20th century is a moral
wasteland and a corruption of the original idealistic
American Dream of the past.
Fitzgerald's moral wasteland is shown physically
in the "valley of ashes" scene of the novel. This
'dismal' and 'desolate' wasteland exists side-by-side
with
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materialism cannot be successful
without accompanying morality. Cut off from their
mid-West traditions and ethics, the characters in the
novel live in a sort of sick parody of the American
Dream. They cannot be truly happy because they lack
the inner reserves for such an emotion. This parallels
modern society's rootlessness and accompanying
corruption of the American Dream. Without something to
believe in, to hold on to, we can not attain anything
of genuine worth.
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