"The american dream" Essays and Research Papers

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    segregation was still aloud. In this play you meet a cast of people with dreams of a better life. The American Dream‚ to be specific. This dream is portrayed differently for each character‚ all of which impact the play. Two of these character `s are Walter Lee Younger and Lena Younger. In Raisin in the Sun Mama and Walter’s American dreams conflict and impact the family through materialism and desire to be the ideal American family in society. Mama and Walter both desire to provide for their

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    The "American dream" was a term coined by James Truslow Adams in his book‚ "The Epics of America." It has become a familiar slogan‚ but each individual’s perception of this abstract phrase varies and can have multiple meanings. Although‚ each interpretation commonly states the American dream is the hope of an ideal life of happiness and success for all who may aspire. When I think of the American dream‚ I think of a "rag to riches" story made possible through the different freedoms America offers

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    The American dream...definitely still out there‚ but as the years go by it becomes more and more of a rarity.not because of opportunity but because of work ethic and motivation. what is the American Dream? It’s “the ​belief that everyone in the US has the ​chance to be ​successful and ​happy if they ​work hard”(Cambridge)The American Dream is exactly that‚ a national ethos of the United States.The idea is that through America’s freedoms you have the opportunity for prosperity and your idea of success

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    credited for originating the term the “American Dream” in the early years of the Great Depression‚ but the hard work‚ dedication‚ and sacrifice it takes to accomplish the American Dream has been around since the early days of this nation’s history. The American Dream refers to “the belief that anyone‚ regardless of what class they were born into‚ can attain their own version of success in a society where upward mobility is possible for everyone” (“American Dream”). It is precisely that upward mobility

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    I have always been fascinated by the concept of the “American Dream”. Even if‚ nowadays‚ this concept is more and more criticize because some people believe that the structure of American society doesn’t follow anymore the idealistic goal of the “American Dream”‚ providing example such as inequality in class or race which suggest that the “American Dream” is not attainable for all. But to me the term “American Dream” stays unchanged: all people can succeed through hard work‚ and all people have

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    III 30 March 2017 Does Money Really Affect the American Dream? “In 1985‚ roughly 10 percent of all Americans had suffered an acute financial trauma”‚ according to Hendrick Smith from Who Stole the American Dream? (Smith). For different reasons‚ people do not have a substantial amount of money for everyday necessities. Money will affect people’s ability to achieve their American Dream through race‚ culture‚ and beliefs. Everyone has an American Dream‚ and money is the backbone to almost everything

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    The American Dream The idea of the American dream began when immigrants migrated to America in hope to become successful‚ have financial stability‚ and receive rights they could not in their country. The American dream however was not only fancied by immigrants. Americans also had faith and wanted to pursue the American dream. The confidence in the American dream has diminished over time due to several economic developments and government policies that has widened the gap between the rich and the

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    The phrase‚ the American Dream is a national ethos of the United States and the idea that clutched many immigrants who came to the US at a deep emotional level. Having left their own countries means they left not only their friends and family‚ but everything that identifies who they are. However‚ whether or not they left their countries because of war‚ poverty or civil or religious persecution‚ they believed that in America‚ they could achieve a better quality of life if they work hard enough. It

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    The American Dream is core to the American worldview. Though people from schoolteachers to presidential candidates have spoken on this topic‚ there seems to be no consensus as to whether it is dead or alive. One of the many articles written on the Dream is “The American Dream is Dead—Here’s Where It Went” by Adelle Peters‚ and as the title suggests‚ Peters argues that the American Dream is dead. According to her‚ low upward mobility‚ caused by unequal education and a gaping income inequality‚ has

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    There are some people who might define the “American Dream” as having no real struggles‚ living in a mansion with an endless bank account‚ or having access to every opportunity that there is in life. However‚ the American Dream has somewhat taken on a new meaning for some in our world‚ where it’s less about materialistic things and more about enjoying the lives that we are given. In the article 5 Ways Our Founding Fathers Protect The American Dream by Kimberly Amadeo‚ she explains that James Truslow

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