急求一篇关于美国梦的英语文章,要有人物事例的,多多益善

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关于 美国梦 的英文文章~

The American Dream is the faith held by many in the United States of America that through hard work, courage, and determination one can achieve a better life for oneself, usually through financial prosperity. These were values held by many early European settlers, and have been passed on to subsequent generations. What the American Dream has become is a question under constant discussion, and some believe that it has led to an emphasis on material wealth as a measure of success and/or happiness.
often the first glimpse of the United States for millions of American immigrants after oceanic voyages from Europe.

The origin of the American Dream stems from the departure in government and economics from the models of the Old World. This allowed unprecedented freedom, especially the possibility of dramatic upward social mobility. Additionally, from the American Revolutionary War well into the later half of the nineteenth century, many of America's physical resources were unclaimed and held out the promise of land ownership and lucky investment in land or industry. The development of the Industrial Revolution combined with the great natural resources of the enormous and as yet unsettled continent created the possibility of achieving wealth.

Many early American prospectors headed west of the Rocky Mountains to buy acres of cheap land in hopes of finding deposits of gold. The American Dream was a driving factor not only in the gold rushes of the mid to late 1800s, but also in the waves of immigration throughout that century and the following.

Impoverished western Europeans escaping the Irish potato famines in Ireland, the Highland clearances in Scotland and the aftermath of Napoleon in the rest of Europe came to America to escape a poor quality of life at home. They wanted to embrace the financial mobility and constitutional freedoms that existed in the United States.

A sizable number of Chinese and Japanese immigrants also arrived in the U.S. in the mid 19th century seeking the American Dream. This led to the founding of several Chinatowns in locations such as San Francisco and New York City. Many immigrants from these countries also worked as laborers on the First Transcontinental Railroad.

During the mid-to-late 19th century prolific dime novel writer Horatio Alger, Jr. became famous for his novels that idealized the American Dream. His novels about down-and-out bootblacks who were able to achieve wealth and success helped entrench the dream within popular culture. Nearing the twentieth century, major industrialist personalities became the new model of the American Dream, many beginning life in the humblest of conditions but later controlling enormous corporations and fortunes. Perhaps most notable here were the great American capitalists Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller. This acquisition of great wealth demonstrated to many that if you had talent, intelligence, and a willingness to work extremely hard, you were likely to be a success in life as a result.

Throughout the 19th century, immigrants fled the monarchies of Western Europe and their post-feudal economies, which actively oppressed the peasant class. These economic systems required high levels of taxation, which stymied development. The American economy, however, was built up by people who were consciously free of these constraints.

Settlement in the new world provided hope for egalitarianism. Martin Luther King invoked the American Dream in what is perhaps his most famous speech: "Let us not wallow in the valley of despair, I say to you today, my friends. And so even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American Dream."
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Immigration
Ellis Island is the historical processing and welcoming center for newly arrived immigrants in New York City.
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Ellis Island is the historical processing and welcoming center for newly arrived immigrants in New York City.

The American dream, along with escape from persecution or war in one's home country, has always been the primary reason for immigrants wanting to come to America. Throughout its history, America has been seen as a place with high opportunity for entrepreneurs relative to other regions of the world.

By the turn of the 20th century, the promise of the American Dream had begun to lure substantial numbers of immigrants from Eastern and Southern Europe. Huge numbers of Italians, Poles, Greeks, Jews, Russians and others came to find work in industrial cities such as New York, Chicago, Philadelphia and Detroit. This wave of immigration continued until the outbreak of World War I. Following the war, nativist sentiment led to new restrictions on immigration, which would continue until the Immigration and Nationality Services Act of 1965, which allowed larger scale immigration to resume.

The American Dream appears to have enduring appeal to many in other countries. The United States remains a magnet for immigrants today, receiving 1 million legal entrants annually — the largest influx in the world. Whereas past generations of immigrants tended to come from Europe, a majority of contemporary immigrants hail from Latin America and Asia.
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The American Dream today

In the 20th century, the American Dream had its challenges. The Great Depression caused widespread hardship during the Thirties, and was almost a reverse of the dream for those directly affected. Racial instability did not disappear, and in some parts of the country racial violence was almost commonplace. There was concern about the undemocratic campaign known as McCarthyism carried on against suspected Communists.
Silicon Valley initiated the Computer Age and the dot-com boom. Companies such as Hewlett-Packard, eBay, Intel, Google, Apple, and Oracle remain headquartered there.
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Silicon Valley initiated the Computer Age and the dot-com boom. Companies such as Hewlett-Packard, eBay, Intel, Google, Apple, and Oracle remain headquartered there.

Since the end of World War II, young American families have sought to live in relative comfort and stability in the suburbs that were built up around major cities. This led to the rise of the relatively conservative 1950s, when many pursued the "perfect family" as a part or consequence of the American Dream. This period was shattered by a new generation of young people who embraced the hippie values of the 1960s, denying traditional values such as the American Dream. In modern times, the American Dream is seen as a possible accomplishment, as all children can go to school and get an education. Though the drive to it waned during those years, the dream itself has never died out.

In the 1990s, the pursuit of the American Dream could be seen in the Dot-com boom. People in U.S., as well as the world poured their energy into the new Gold Rush - the Internet. It was again driven by the same faith that by one's ingenuity and hardwork, anyone can become successful in America. Ordinary people started new companies from their garages and became millionaires. This new chapter of the American Dream again became the beacon to the world and attracted many entrepreneurial people from China and India to Silicon Valley to form startups, and seek fortune in America.

Another recent example of the American Dream being realized is the case of Tamir Sapir. An immigrant from the former Soviet republic of Georgia, Sapir arrived in America in 1973 and started as a taxicab driver in New York City. Saving up to buy an electronics store, he catered primarily to Russian clientele. Eventually he made contacts with the Soviet contingent to the United Nations in New York, and traded electronics for oil contracts, which he then sold to American companies. Investing the profits in Manhattan real estate, he became a billionaire by 2002, less than thirty years after arriving penniless in America. Like many rags to riches stories, his is a unique one that would be hard to replicate. Yet today Sapir is becoming known as America's "billionaire cabbie".
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Criticism
Harvard University offers a free college education to all accepted students from low-income U.S. families.
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Harvard University offers a free college education to all accepted students from low-income U.S. families.

The concept of the American Dream has been the subject of much criticism by, for example, Joseph Stiglitz. The main criticism is that the American Dream is misleading. These critics say that, for various reasons, it simply is not possible for everyone to become prosperous through determination and hard work alone. The consequences of this belief can include the poor feeling that it is their fault that they are not successful. It can also result in less effort towards helping the poor since their poverty is seen as "proof" of their laziness. The concept of the American Dream also ignores other factors of success such as luck, family, language, and wealth one is born into (although proponents of the dream would claim that starting wealth is irrelevant because of the belief that there is no level of poverty one cannot rise from with hard work). It also fails to take inheritable traits such as intelligence quotient and physical attributes including height, shape, and beauty into account.

The American Dream is seen by critics as being somewhat superficial or meaningless. Many literary works level exactly that criticism at the American Dream, such as Arthur Miller's play Death of a Salesman. The play, a classic American work of literature, finds the main character Willy Loman struggling to come to grips with the fact that his American Dream is unattainable. Such arguments are essentially rehashes of the old adage "Money doesn't buy happiness", and that perhaps not everyone's dream should be to achieve great monetary gain.

In particular some of the criticisms are:

* In the U.S. there is wide availability of financial aid, and the poorest students are increasingly being given guarantees of a high proportion (up to 100%) of grants, removing the obligation to pay back their university. Harvard University became the first private university to offer 100% grants to accepted students from U.S. families earning less than US$40,000 a year in 2003, and in 2004 the University of Virginia became the first public university to offer a similar full-grant program, on incomes up to 200% of the poverty line, or about US$37,700 at that time.

* Wealth retention – Certain laws allow the wealthy to keep more of their money. For example, the recent lessening of inheritance tax and capital gains taxes may work to further solidify wealth once it is earned.
* Economies of scale – It can be difficult to successfully start a business. One reason is because of the economies of scale necessary to survive in a commoditized market, although many markets today are not commoditized.
* Genetic lottery – Research has suggested that features like IQ and extroversion may give certain people some advantages over others when it comes to making smart business decisions or career choices, and in establishing a social network.
* Ethical differences – As in other countries, actions considered ethical vary between Americans. For example, a CEO who sees certain stock options as excessive monetary gain would find it harder to attain great wealth than one with a different viewpoint.

美国梦
The term American Dream has had many shades of meaning throughout American history. Today, it generally refers to the idea that one's prosperity depends upon one's own abilities and hard work, not on a rigid class structure. For some, it is the opportunity to achieve more prosperity than they could in their countries of origin; for others, it is the opportunity for their children to grow up with an education and career opportunities; for still others, it is the opportunity to be an individual without the constraints imposed by class, caste, race, gender or ethnicity. It sometimes includes the idea of owning a home.

The definition of the American Dream is under constant discussion and debate.[1] Also "The package of beliefs, assumptions, and action patterns that social scientists have labeled the American dream has always been a fragile agglomeration of (1) individual freedom of choice in life styles, (2) equal access to economic abundance, and (3) the pursuit of shared objectives mutually advantageous to the individual and society."

While the term "American Dream" today is often associated with immigrants, native-born Americans can also be described as "pursuing the American Dream" or "living the American Dream".
人物具体在下面网页有一个

Ask most people how they define the American Dream and chances are they’ll say, “Success.” The dream of individual opportunity has been home in American since Europeans discovered a “new world” in the Western Hemisphere. Early immigrants like Hector St. Jean de Crevecoeur praised highly the freedom and opportunity to be found in this new land. His glowing descriptions of a classless society where anyone could attain success through honesty and hard work fired the imaginations of many European readers: in Letters from an American Farmer (1782) he wrote. “We are all excited at the spirit of an industry which is unfettered (无拘无束的) and unrestrained, because each person works for himself … We have no princes, for whom we toil (干苦力活),starve, and bleed: we are the most perfect society now existing in the world.” The promise of a land where “the rewards of a man’s industry follow with equal steps the progress of his labor” drew poor immigrants from Europe and fueled national expansion into the western territories.
Our national mythology (神化) is full of illustration the American success story. There’s Benjamin Franklin, the very model of the self-educated, self-made man, who rose from modest origins to become a well-known scientist, philosopher, and statesman. In the nineteenth century, Horatio Alger, a writer of fiction for young boys, became American’s best-selling author with rags-to-riches tales. The notion of success haunts us: we spend million every year reading about the rich and famous, learning how to “make a fortune in real estate with no money down,” and “dressing for success.” The myth of success has even invaded our personal relationships: today it’s as important to be “successful” in marriage or parenthoods as it is to come out on top in business.
But dreams easily turn into nightmares. Every American who hopes to “make it” also knows the fear of failure, because the myth of success inevitably implies comparison between the haves and the have-nots, the stars and the anonymous crowd. Under pressure of the myth, we become indulged in status symbols: we try to live in the “right” neighborhoods, wear the “right” clothes, eat the “right” foods. These symbols of distinction assure us and others that we believe strongly in the fundamental equality of all, yet strive as hard as we can to separate ourselves from our fellow citizens.


关于American dream
是典型的美国梦的代表。例子有 "house on mango street" by Sandra Ciserno.还有一种是反面的,就是大萧条时期很多人梦想随经济狂跌而破灭。例子有 "death of a salesman" by Arthur Miller.总的来说,一切有关于努力工作而取得成功的文学或影视作品。都属于美国梦的范畴。

美国文学中有关“美国梦”(American Dream)的概念是怎样来的呢?
http:\/\/pdf.sznews.com\/szdaily\/2001\/0226s\/7.htm American dream 美国梦 California is full for foreign immigrants who came to the US to share the American dream, a popular belief that hard work will bring forth America's bounty in the form of material well-being.加州有许多外国...

美国梦的演变
《了不起的盖茨比》是描写美国梦破碎的小说

美国作家写了一篇关于中国是一个什么样的民族的书是什么?
《中国结·美国梦: 中美文化差异趣谈》的作者“简孙”,曾就读于两所中国名牌大学,又在南方一个文化大省当了数年的大学教授,后来去了美国,开始时当了一名工人。这就是她的“美国梦”: 从大学教授到“服装厂的包装工”

了不起的盖茨比读后感
美国梦的必然破灭有了深刻的印象。小说采用第一人称的叙事手法,仿佛书中发生的一切都是尼克的亲身见闻,不加虚 饰,令人感到亲切可信。尼克和盖茨比两人从陌生到认识,感情上既有距离,又有融和,富有多种层次的结合和区别,写得脉络清晰,恰到好处。这种把不同的观点巧妙地统一 在一部小说中,使作品...

电影了不起的盖茨比,反映20世纪20年代的美国哪些社会现象?
本文在对小说人物所处的社会大背景及历史史实进行考察之后解读文本中人物角色的境遇,借此加深对二十世纪二十年代美国社会风貌的了解,人们生活方式的浮躁以及时代的道德堕落。一九二零年代,梦想破灭的美国梦美国梦描述了对人类愿望实现的信念,这一信念在一七七六年发表的美国“独立宣言”中得到了明确表示:...

求一篇有关“中国梦”或“美国梦”的英语作文,300个单词左右
这是我曾经写的一篇,去参加比赛,结果还没出来,你看看行不行?名字叫《我的中国梦》。History of dribs and drabs Chinese, as the night sky that is playfully winking stars. I looked up in the night, watching the twinkling stars, sometimes looked down, thought... The Chinese dream,...

有谁知道美国梦的提出者,而且能告诉我从哪里找到的资料吗?
美国梦是谁提出来的,美国一个历史学家。在三十年代初期,亚当斯他提出来的,他是一个历史学家,在美国陷入1929到1933年经济大萧条的时候,他在一篇文章提到美国梦,美国梦就是在这个国家里面,大家普通人他可以通过自己努力来改变自己的未来,后来这个题目就被很多美国人抓住了,做了一篇很大的文章,举...

求一篇感动的英语文章
这个梦深深植根于美国梦之中。 我梦想有一天,这个国家将会奋起,实现其立国信条的真谛:“我们认为这些真理不言而喻:人人生而平等。” 我梦想有一天,在佐治亚州的红色山岗上,昔日奴隶的儿子能够同昔日奴隶主的儿子同席而坐,亲如手足。 我梦想有一天,甚至连密西西比州——一个非正义和压迫的热浪逼人的荒漠之州,...

Tony Trivisonno′s American Dream翻译
托尼的事业很小,那些最大的实业家的事业很大。但究其实,两者的资产负债表完全—样。惟—的不同是你把小数点点在什么地方。托尼?特里韦索诺来到美国寻求美国梦。但他没有找到什么美国梦——他为自己创造了—个美国梦。他的全部拥有是一大宝贵的二十四小时,而他—刻也没有浪费。

金城江区13937018289: 急求一篇关于美国梦的英语文章,要有人物事例的,多多益善 -
徵砖迪非:[答案] Ask most people how they define the American Dream and chances are they'll say,“Success.” The dream of individual opportunity has been home in American since Europeans discovered a “new world” in...

金城江区13937018289: 关于美国梦的英语作文约12 0 -
徵砖迪非:[答案] Three hundred years ago,the emigrants from England arrived at Maryland acrossing the Atlantic by "May Flower" to search... "pure"land for the puritans to live.Since then American Dream has come up.America gives every person all over the world ...

金城江区13937018289: 关于Americandream求一篇关于美国梦的文章英文谢阿!~
徵砖迪非: american dream直的一是一种有意义的,令人满足的,理想的生活状态,是一种对自由的追求和通过自身努力来取得成功的希望. 由于它的意义是在是太广泛,所以很难找出你所期望的结果.我的建议是,一般文学作品其作者是移民的,内容是到美国寻找成功的,是典型的美国梦的代表.例子有 "house on mango street" by Sandra Ciserno. 还有一种是反面的,就是大萧条时期很多人梦想随经济狂跌而破灭.例子有 "death of a salesman" by Arthur Miller. 总的来说,一切有关于努力工作而取得成功的文学或影视作品.都属于美国梦的范畴.

金城江区13937018289: what is the dream?求一篇英文文章,4分钟左右的演讲稿.复制的也可以,只要不是太难就行. -
徵砖迪非: 您好,没有说具体要求,就给您找了篇关于美国梦的英语稿,希望对您有帮助:What is the American Dream? - by Nancy The term was first used by James Truslow Adams in his book The Epic of America which was written in 1931. He states: "...

金城江区13937018289: 求一篇150英语作文关于美国梦 -
徵砖迪非: 自1776年以来,世世代代的美国人都深信不疑,只要经过努力不懈的奋斗便能获得更好的生活,亦即人们必须通过自己的勤奋、勇气、创意和决心迈向繁荣,而非依赖于特定的社会阶级和他人的援助.两百年来,“美国梦”一直激励着世界各地的青年人来到这片土地创造自己的价值,美国也因此成为全球成功人士的摇篮.

金城江区13937018289: 我有一个美国梦 英语作文 一百字左右 -
徵砖迪非: Some say, that the American Dream has become the pursuit of material prosperity—thatpeople work more hours to get bigger cars, fancier homes, the fruits of prosperity for theirfamilies—but have less time to enjoy their prosperity. Others say that the...

金城江区13937018289: 有没有关于美国梦的英语故事?我们英语课要讲故事~关于美国梦的 -
徵砖迪非:[答案] One Friday morning,a teacher came up.She started with "This was England's finest hour." Little Suzy instantly jumped up ... Every August.Every August for twelve years.Every August for twelve years we went to the same small town on holiday.Every ...

金城江区13937018289: 英语作文《美国梦与中国梦》 -
徵砖迪非:[答案] Chinese dream and America dream in our school knows that there is a call Martin Ruud Kim leaders of the civil rights ... 他的那句 “我有 一个梦想”传遍了世界.让世人知道美国梦的力量.关于美国梦的话题太多了.但是,正如 白岩松所说的, “一定要知...

金城江区13937018289: 急求~·关于美国梦典型人物的英文文章 -
徵砖迪非: 美国梦 The term American Dream has had many shades of meaning throughout American history. Today, it generally refers to the idea that one's prosperity depends upon one's own abilities and hard work, not on a rigid class structure. For some, ...

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