The ideal and the real reflect the novel’s major themes the American Dream and the corruption of the wealthy by showing that in the 1920’s the reader would need to know social and economic changes to determine what’s real and what’s not. The reader would need to know the real facts of history in that time and also they would need to know what the stories - which people tell you to make the story more believable - mean. The Decline of the American Dream is a theme that describes how people in the 1920s could not catch their dream because they were corrupted by easy money and an overall relaxing of social values. In The Great Gatsby, we see Gatsby who cannot capture his elusive dream because of Daisy, corrupted by easy money, and the relaxing of social values. Gatsby is just like many people in the 1920s because they all chase after an elusive dream …show more content…
In the story, New Money is portrayed as loud, lacking in social graces, wearing pink suits, owning huge mansions, and driving flashy cars. Old Money is portrayed as having social graces, elegance, tasteful homes and beautiful clothing. The story represents Gatsby (New Money) who is kind-hearted and a good guy with a good heart and the opposite class which is Tom and Daisy (Old Money) in which they have no heart and are hollow with no consideration for anybody else. In the end, the reader has to know these themes in the story to understand it because all of these reasons leads up to the end of the book. The story tells the reader how, in the 1920’s, different classes of money try to reach to the top of the social ladder. They tell you what is real and what is not in the 1920s and shows you the novel’s major themes, The American Dream and the corruption of the wealthy? The Great Gatsby tells you how the American Dream was worked so hard for by one man and how the wealthy used and corrupted that one man’s dream for more