In The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby achieves the American Dream of success through his hard work and dedication after the war like many others. The reader first identifies Gatsby’s devotion to achieving his American Dream during a conversation between Nick and Gatsby. Nick asked Gatsby, “I thought you inherited your money.” (Gatsby replied,) “I did, old sport,” he said automatically, “but I lost most of it in the big panic- the panic of the war” (Fitzgerald 90). In connection with the time period when the economy was at a low, Gatsby had lost all the money he had inherited. From his loss, he strived to regain his fortune, forcing him to work in order to fulfil his American Dream of being self-sufficient with his love, Daisy. Then, during …show more content…
“Why of course you can” (110). Gatsby believes that if he would not have gone into the war and lost his fortune, he and Daisy would be together living his American Dream. Since Gatsby went to war, he left Daisy behind like many other men did to their significant others, creating distance and changes in personality. Overall, Daisy’s feelings for Gatsby may have stopped and Gatsby knows he would go back to her with nothing broke the relationship. By Gatsby saying how he can repeat the past, he thirsts to change the history that has come between them. Lastly, Wrapping these two thoughts of the transition into a modernism time period with the great drive to achieve the American Dream, Robert Beuka, a published author of American Icon: Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, wrote, “…standard theme in suburban fiction and popular culture of the postwar years … we see a sort of pre-suburban version of a similar anxiety infusing The Great Gatsby… the novel provides any number of angles through which a reader of today can bridge the gap to an era that saw transitions, on several levels, into