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Wikipedia

American Dream

The American Dream is the national ethos of the United States, a set of ideals including representative democracy, rights, liberty, and equality, in which freedom is interpreted as the opportunity for individual prosperity and success, as well as the chance for upward social mobility for each according to ability and achievement through hard work in a capitalist society with many challenges but few formal barriers.

During the mid-19th to the early 20th century in the United States, for many immigrants, the Statue of Liberty (Liberty Enlightening the World) in New York Harbor was their first view of the country. In this role, it signified new opportunities for Americans and evolved into a symbol of the American Dream.

The term "American Dream" was popularized by James Truslow Adams in 1931, saying that "life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement" regardless of social class or circumstances of birth.[1]

Proponents of the American Dream often claim that its tenets originate from the United States Declaration of Independence, which states that "all men are created equal" with the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness".[2] The Preamble to the Constitution of the United States is used similarly, and states that the Constitution's purpose is to, in part, "secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity".[a]

Throughout American history, there have been critics of its national ethos. Some critics have said that American focus on individualism and capital results in materialism, consumerism, and a lack of worker solidarity.[3] In 2015, only 10.5 percent of American workers were members of a labor union.[4][needs update] The American Dream has also been criticized as a product of American exceptionalism, as it does not acknowledge the hardships many Americans face, namely in regards to the legacies of American slavery and Native American genocide, as well as other examples of discriminatory violence.[5]

Belief in the American Dream is often inversely associated with rates of national disillusionment. Evidence indicates that upward economic mobility has declined and income inequality has risen in the United States in recent decades.[6] In 2020, a poll found 54 percent of American adults thought the American Dream was attainable for them, 28 percent believed it was unattainable for them personally, while 9 percent rejected the idea of the American Dream entirely. Younger generations were also less likely to believe in the American Dream than their older counterparts.[7] Women are more skeptical of achieving the American Dream than men are.[8]

History

The meaning of the American Dream has changed over the course of history, and includes both personal components such as home ownership and upward mobility as well as a global vision for cultural hegemony and diplomacy.

18th century

Historically, the Dream originated in colonial mystique regarding frontier life. As John Murray, 4th Earl of Dunmore, the colonial Governor of Virginia, noted in 1774, the Americans "for ever imagine the Lands further off are still better than those upon which they are already settled". He added that, "if they attained Paradise, they would move on if they heard of a better place farther west".[9] The idea of the American Dream is ever evolving and changing. When the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4, 1776, the founding fathers believed that this would ratify the role of government and society in the United States. Jim Cullen notability claims:

Ever since, the Declaration of Independence has functioned as the banner of the American Dream, one repeatedly waved by figures that included women’s rights activists, populists, homosexuals, and anyone who has ever believed that happiness can not only be pursued, but attained. The U.S. Constitution, which marked the other bookend of the nation’s creation, lacks the mythic resonances of the Declaration, though it takes little reflection to see that it is the backdrop, if not the foundation, for all American Dreams. Whatever their disagreements about its scope or character, most Americans would agree that their national government is legitimate insofar as it permits a level playing field of dreams. Many of us have doubts that the government does serve this function; few have doubts that it should.[10]

19th century

Many well-educated Germans who fled the failed 1848 revolution found the United States more politically free than their homeland, which they believed to be a hierarchical and aristocratic society that determined the ceiling for their aspirations. One of them said:

The German emigrant comes into a country free from the despotism, privileged orders and monopolies, intolerable taxes, and constraints in matters of belief and conscience. Everyone can travel and settle wherever he pleases. No passport is demanded, no police mingles in his affairs or hinders his movements ... Fidelity and merit are the only sources of honor here. The rich stand on the same footing as the poor; the scholar is not a mug above the most humble mechanics; no German ought to be ashamed to pursue any occupation ... [In America] wealth and possession of real estate confer not the least political right on its owner above what the poorest citizen has. Nor are there nobility, privileged orders, or standing armies to weaken the physical and moral power of the people, nor are there swarms of public functionaries to devour in idleness credit for. Above all, there are no princes and corrupt courts representing the so-called divine 'right of birth'. In such a country the talents, energy and perseverance of a person ... have far greater opportunity to display than in monarchies.[11]

The discovery of gold in California in 1849 brought in a hundred thousand men looking for their fortune overnight—and a few did find it. Thus was born the California Dream of instant success. Historian H. W. Brands noted that in the years after the Gold Rush, the California Dream spread across the nation:

The old American Dream ... was the dream of the Puritans, of Benjamin Franklin's "Poor Richard"... of men and women content to accumulate their modest fortunes a little at a time, year by year by year. The new dream was the dream of instant wealth, won in a twinkling by audacity and good luck. [This] golden dream ... became a prominent part of the American psyche only after Sutter's Mill.[12]

During the 18th century provided Americans with new sources of wealth and looking for new ways of travel. When looking at immigration in history, it is important to consider the different experiences of gender as much as race. There are often times tensions between economic and political agendas. By studying the global tensions and events outside of the United States, helps to form a broader viewpoint and perspective of the past. After 1776, the United States became a part of the global connections improving marketing opportunities. This paragraph highlights the complex relationships between global integration within American history:

These complicated transnational networks themselves are not the only story. Along with global integration went attempts to assert national distinctiveness amid growing global competition. Americans conceived of and responded to these pressures by striving to create national economic independence because they wanted to maintain political and social independence. Thus there was tension between the economic imperatives of global integration, and national political debates and economic agendas - such as the enhancement of national security through a strong industrial and financial base.[13]

Historian Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 advanced the frontier thesis, under which American democracy and the American Dream were formed by the American frontier. He stressed the process—the moving frontier line—and the impact it had on pioneers going through the process. He also stressed results; especially that American democracy was the primary result, along with egalitarianism, a lack of interest in high culture, and violence. "American democracy was born of no theorist's dream; it was not carried in the Susan Constant to Virginia, nor in the Mayflower to Plymouth. It came out of the American forest, and it gained new strength each time it touched a new frontier," said Turner.[14]

In Turner's thesis, the American frontier established liberty by releasing Americans from European mindsets and eroding old, dysfunctional customs. The frontier had no need for standing armies, established churches, aristocrats or nobles, nor for landed gentry who controlled most of the land and charged heavy rents. Frontier land was free for the taking. Turner first announced his thesis in a paper entitled "The Significance of the Frontier in American History", delivered to the American Historical Association in 1893 in Chicago. He won wide acclaim among historians and intellectuals. Turner elaborated on the theme in his advanced history lectures and in a series of essays published over the next 25 years, published along with his initial paper as The Frontier in American History.[15] Turner's emphasis on the importance of the frontier in shaping American character influenced the interpretation found in thousands of scholarly histories. By the time Turner died in 1932, 60% of the leading history departments in the U.S. were teaching courses in frontier history along Turnerian lines.[16]

 
Americanization of California (1932) by Dean Cornwell

20th century

Freelance writer James Truslow Adams popularized the phrase "American Dream" in his 1931 book Epic of America:[17]

But there has been also the American dream, that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for every man, with opportunity for each according to his ability or achievement. It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately, and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it. It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely, but a dream of social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable, and be recognized by others for what they are, regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position... The American dream, that has lured tens of millions of all nations to our shores in the past century has not been a dream of merely material plenty, though that has doubtlessly counted heavily. It has been much more than that. It has been a dream of being able to grow to fullest development as man and woman, unhampered by the barriers which had slowly been erected in the older civilizations, unrepressed by social orders which had developed for the benefit of classes rather than for the simple human being of any and every class.

Adams contended that extreme wealth inequality was among the worst enemies of the American Dream, and said that:[17]

So long also as we are ourselves content with a mere extension of the material basis of existence, with the multiplying of our material possessions, it is absurd to think that the men who can utilize that public attitude for the gaining of infinite wealth and power for themselves will abandon both to become spiritual leaders of a democracy that despises spiritual things.

He also said that the American institution that best exemplified the American dream was the Library of Congress; he contrasted it with European libraries of the time, which restricted access to many of their works, and argued that the Library, as an institution funded by and meant to uphold democracy, was an example of democratic government's ability to uplift and equalize the people that it ruled over and was ruled by in order to "save itself" from a takeover by the elite. The Library also offered an opportunity for the whole nation to come together in thoughtful pursuit of a common good, which Adams claimed needed to be "carried out in all departments of our national life" in order to make the American Dream a reality.[17]

Martin Luther King Jr., in his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail" (1963), rooted the civil rights movement in the African-American quest for the American Dream:[18]

We will win our freedom because the sacred heritage of our nation and the eternal will of God are embodied in our echoing demands ... when these disinherited children of God sat down at lunch counters they were in reality standing up for what is best in the American dream and for the most sacred values in our Judeo-Christian heritage, thereby bringing our nation back to those great wells of democracy which were dug deep by the Founding Fathers in their formulation of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence.

Literature

The concept of the American Dream has been used in popular discourse, and scholars have traced its use in American literature ranging from the Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin,[19] to Mark Twain's Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884), Willa Cather's My Ántonia,[20] F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby (1925), Theodore Dreiser's An American Tragedy (1925) and Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon (1977).[21] Other writers who used the American Dream theme include Hunter S. Thompson, Edward Albee,[22] John Steinbeck,[23] Langston Hughes,[24] and Giannina Braschi.[25]

In 2006, Dr. Guiyou Huang from St. Thomas University in Florida wrote a paper regarding the American Dream as a recurring theme in the fiction of Asian Americans.[26][27]

American ideals

Many American authors added American ideals to their work as a theme or other reoccurring idea, to get their point across.[28] There are many ideals that appear in American literature such as that all people are equal, the United States is the land of opportunity, independence is valued, the American Dream is attainable, and everyone can succeed with hard work and determination. John Winthrop also wrote about this term called American exceptionalism. This ideology refers to the idea that Americans are, as a nation, elect.[29]

Literary commentary

 
European governments, worried that their best young people would leave for America, distributed posters like this to frighten them (this 1869 Swedish anti-emigration poster contrasts Per Svensson's dream of the American idyll (left) and the reality of his life in the wilderness (right), where he is menaced by a mountain lion, a big snake and wild Indians who are scalping and disembowelling someone).[30]

The American Dream has been credited with helping to build a cohesive American experience, but has also been blamed for inflated expectations.[31] Some commentators have noted that despite deep-seated belief in the egalitarian American Dream, the modern American wealth structure still perpetuates racial and class inequalities between generations.[32] One sociologist notes that advantage and disadvantage are not always connected to individual successes or failures, but often to prior position in a social group.[32]

Since the 1920s, numerous authors, such as Sinclair Lewis in his 1922 novel Babbitt, and F. Scott Fitzgerald, in his 1925 classic, The Great Gatsby, satirized or ridiculed materialism in the chase for the American dream. For example, Jay Gatsby's death mirrors the American Dream's demise, reflecting the pessimism of modern-day Americans.[33] The American Dream is a main theme in the book by John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men. The two friends George and Lennie dream of their own piece of land with a ranch, so they can "live off the fatta the lan'" and just enjoy a better life. The book later shows that not everyone can achieve the American Dream, although it is possible to achieve for a few. A lot of people follow the American Dream to achieve a greater chance of becoming rich. Some posit that the ease of achieving the American Dream changes with technological advances, availability of infrastructure and information, government regulations, state of the economy, and with the evolving cultural values of American demographics.

In 1949, Arthur Miller wrote Death of a Salesman, in which the American Dream is a fruitless pursuit. Similarly, in 1971 Hunter S. Thompson depicted in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey Into the Heart of the American Dream a dark psychedelic reflection of the concept—successfully illustrated only in wasted pop-culture excess.[34]

The novel Requiem for a Dream by Hubert Selby Jr. is an exploration of the pursuit of American success as it turns delirious and lethal, told through the ensuing tailspin of its main characters. George Carlin famously wrote the joke "it's called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it".[35][36] Carlin pointed to "the big wealthy business interests that control things and make all the important decisions" as having a greater influence than an individual's choice.[35] Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and leftist activist Chris Hedges echos this sentiment in his 2012 book Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt:[37]

The vaunted American dream, the idea that life will get better, that progress is inevitable if we obey the rules and work hard, that material prosperity is assured, has been replaced by a hard and bitter truth. The American dream, we now know, is a lie. We will all be sacrificed. The virus of corporate abuse—the perverted belief that only corporate profit matters—has spread to outsource our jobs, cut the budgets of our schools, close our libraries, and plague our communities with foreclosures and unemployment.

The American Dream, and the sometimes dark response to it, has been a long-standing theme in American film.[38] Many counterculture films of the 1960s and 1970s ridiculed the traditional quest for the American Dream. For example, Easy Rider (1969), directed by Dennis Hopper, shows the characters making a pilgrimage in search of "the true America" in terms of the hippie movement, drug use, and communal lifestyles.[39]

Political leaders

Scholars have explored the American Dream theme in the careers of numerous political leaders, including Henry Kissinger,[40] Hillary Clinton,[41] Benjamin Franklin, and Abraham Lincoln.[42] The theme has been used for many local leaders as well, such as José Antonio Navarro, the Tejano leader (1795–1871), who served in the legislatures of Coahuila y Texas, the Republic of Texas, and the State of Texas.[43]

In 2006 U.S. Senator Barack Obama wrote a memoir, The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream. It was this interpretation of the American Dream for a young black man that helped establish his statewide and national reputations.[44][45] The exact meaning of the Dream became a minor partisan political issue in the 2008 and 2012 elections.[46]

Political conflicts, to some degree, have been ameliorated by the shared values of all parties in the expectation that the American Dream will resolve many difficulties and conflicts.[47]

Public opinion

The ethos today implies an opportunity for Americans to achieve prosperity through hard work. According to the Dream, this includes the opportunity for one's children to grow up and receive a good education and career without artificial barriers. It is the opportunity to make individual choices without the prior restrictions that limited people according to their class, caste, religion, race, or ethnicity. Immigrants to the United States sponsored ethnic newspapers in their own language; the editors typically promoted the American Dream.[48] Lawrence Samuel argues:

For many in both the working class and the middle class, upward mobility has served as the heart and soul of the American Dream, the prospect of "betterment" and to "improve one's lot" for oneself and one's children much of what this country is all about. "Work hard, save a little, send the kids to college so they can do better than you did, and retire happily to a warmer climate" has been the script we have all been handed.[49]

A key element of the American Dream is promoting opportunity for one's children, Johnson interviewing parents says, "This was one of the most salient features of the interview data: parents—regardless of background—relied heavily on the American Dream to understand the possibilities for children, especially their own children".[50] Rank et al. argue, "The hopes and optimism that Americans possess pertain not only to their own lives, but to their children's lives as well. A fundamental aspect of the American Dream has always been the expectation that the next generation should do better than the previous generation."[51]

"A lot of Americans think the U.S. has more social mobility than other western industrialized countries. This [study using medians instead of averages] makes it abundantly clear that we have less. Your circumstances at birth—specifically, what your parents do for a living—are an even bigger factor in how far you get in life than we had previously realized. Generations of Americans considered the United States to be a land of opportunity. This research raises some sobering questions about that image."

Michael Hout, Professor of Sociology at New York University, 2018[52]

Hanson and Zogby (2010) report on numerous public opinion polls that since the 1980s have explored the meaning of the concept for Americans, and their expectations for its future. In these polls, a majority of Americans consistently reported that for their family, the American Dream is more about spiritual happiness than material goods. Majorities state that working hard is the most important element for getting ahead. However, an increasing minority stated that hard work and determination does not guarantee success.[53]

In 2010, most Americans predicted that achieving the Dream with fair means would become increasingly difficult for future generations. They were increasingly pessimistic about the opportunity for the working class to get ahead; on the other hand, they were increasingly optimistic about the opportunities available to poor people and to new immigrants. Furthermore, most supported programs to make special efforts to help minorities get ahead.[53]

In a 2013 poll by YouGov, 41% of responders said it is impossible for most to achieve the American Dream, while 38% said it is still possible.[54] Most Americans perceive a college education as the ticket to the American Dream.[55] Some recent[when?] observers warn that soaring student loan debt crisis and shortages of good jobs may undermine this ticket.[56] The point was illustrated in The Fallen American Dream, a documentary film that details the concept of the American Dream from its historical origins to its current perception.[57]

 
Wealth inequality in the United States increased from 1989 to 2013.[58]

Research published in 2013 shows that the U.S. provides, alongside the United Kingdom and Spain, the least economic mobility of any of 13 rich democratic countries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).[59][60] Prior research suggested that the United States shows roughly average levels of occupational upward mobility and shows lower rates of income mobility than comparable societies.[61][62]

Jo Blanden et al. report, "the idea of the U.S. as 'the land of opportunity' persists; and clearly seems misplaced."[63] According to these studies, "by international standards, the United States has an unusually low level of intergenerational mobility: our parents' income is highly predictive of our incomes as adults. Intergenerational mobility in the United States is lower than in France, Germany, Sweden, Canada, Finland, Norway and Denmark. Research in 2006 found that among high-income countries for which comparable estimates are available, only the United Kingdom had a lower rate of mobility than the United States."[64] Economist Isabel Sawhill concluded that "this challenges the notion of America as the land of opportunity".[65][66][67]

Several public figures and commentators, from David Frum to Richard G. Wilkinson, have said that the American Dream is better realized in Denmark, which is ranked as having the highest social mobility in the OECD.[68][69][70][71][72] In the U.S., 50% of a father's income position is inherited by his son. In contrast, the amount in Norway or Canada is less than 20%. Moreover, in the U.S. 8% of children raised in the bottom 20% of the climbed to the top 20% as adult, while the figure in Denmark is nearly double at 15%.[73][74][75] In 2015, economist Joseph Stiglitz stated, "Maybe we should be calling the American Dream the Scandinavian Dream."[76]

A 2023 paper written by academics at Bocconi University, the Rockwool Foundation, and Stockholm University found that "Intergenerational poverty in the U.S. is four times stronger than in Denmark and Germany, and twice as strong as in Australia and the UK," and that an American child who grows up in poverty has "a 43 percentage point higher mean poverty exposure during early adulthood (relative to an adult with no child poverty exposure)," the highest of the five countries and exceeding the next highest by over 20 percentage points. The researchers found that "the persistence of poverty is strongly connected to tax rates and what they call transfer insurance effects, which can be considered as akin to a social safety net," and that the "U.S. is the archetype of a liberal and residualist welfare state, featuring stratified access to higher education and employment, strong earnings returns to higher education, and a comparatively weak welfare state to insure against risks in adulthood," as well as that "exposure to childhood poverty is particularly severe in the US."[77]

A 2017 study stated that the UK, Canada, and Denmark all offered a greater chance of social mobility.[78] Black families were stated to be disadvantaged relative to white families when it comes to both upward mobility from the bottom and downward mobility from the top according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, with social mobility nationwide appearing to have declined since 1980.[79] Social mobility can also vary widely geographically according to a 2014 paper, with the Southeast and lower East North Central states ranking near the bottom.[80]

In the United States, home ownership is sometimes used as a proxy for achieving the promised prosperity; home ownership has been a status symbol separating the middle classes from the poor.[81]

Sometimes the American Dream is identified with success in sports or how working class immigrants seek to join the American way of life.[82]

According to a 2020 American Journal of Political Science study, Americans become less likely to believe in the attainability of the American dream as income inequality increases.[83] A 2022 study in the same journal found that exposure to "rags-to-riches" narratives in entertainment make Americans more likely to believe in upward mobility.[6]

Four American Dreams

Ownby (1999) identifies four American Dreams that the new consumer culture of the early 20th century addressed:

  • The "Dream of Abundance", offering a cornucopia of material goods to all Americans, making them proud to be the richest society on earth.
  • The "Dream of a Democracy of Goods", whereby everyone had access to the same products regardless of race, gender, ethnicity, or class, thereby challenging the aristocratic norms of the rest of the world where only the rich or well-connected were granted access to luxury.
  • The "Dream of Freedom of Choice", with its ever-expanding variety of good allowed people to fashion their own particular lifestyle.
  • The "Dream of Novelty", in which ever-changing fashions, new models, and unexpected new products broadened the consumer experience in terms of purchasing skills and awareness of the market, and challenged the conservatism of traditional society, culture, and politics.

Ownby acknowledges that the American Dreams of the new consumer culture radiated out from the major cities, but notes that they quickly penetrated the most rural and most isolated areas, such as rural Mississippi. With the arrival of affordable automobiles such as the Ford Model T in the 1910s, consumers in rural America were no longer forced to only buy from local general stores with their limited merchandise and high prices, and could instead visit cheaper, better-stocked shops in towns and cities. Ownby demonstrates that poor black Mississippians shared in the new consumer culture, and it motivated the more ambitious to move to Memphis or Chicago.[84][85]

Other parts of the world

The aspirations of the "American Dream" in the broad sense of upward mobility have been systematically spread to other nations since the 1890s as American missionaries and businessmen consciously sought to spread the Dream, says Rosenberg. Looking at American business, religious missionaries, philanthropies, Hollywood, labor unions and U.S. government agencies, she says they saw their mission not in catering to foreign elites but instead reaching the world's masses in a democratic fashion: "They linked mass production, mass marketing, and technological improvement to an enlightened democratic spirit ... In the emerging litany of the American dream what historian Daniel Boorstin later termed a 'democracy of things' would disprove both Malthus's predictions of scarcity and Marx's of class conflict." It was, she says "a vision of global social progress".[86] Rosenberg calls the overseas version of the American Dream "liberal-developmentalism" and identified five critical components:

(1) belief that other nations could and should replicate America's own developmental experience; (2) faith in private free enterprise; (3) support for free or open access for trade and investment; (4) promotion of free flow of information and culture; and (5) growing acceptance of [U.S.] governmental activity to protect private enterprise and to stimulate and regulate American participation in international economic and cultural exchange.[87]

Knights and McCabe argued American management gurus have taken the lead in exporting the ideas: "By the latter half of the twentieth century they were truly global and through them the American Dream continues to be transmitted, repackaged and sold by an infantry of consultants and academics backed up by an artillery of books and videos".[88]

After World War II

In West Germany after World War II, says Reiner Pommerin, "the most intense motive was the longing for a better life, more or less identical with the American dream, which also became a German dream".[89] Cassamagnaghi argues that to women in Italy after 1945, films and magazine stories about American life offered an American Dream. New York City especially represented a sort of utopia where every sort of dream and desire could become true. Italian women saw a model for their own emancipation from second class status in their patriarchal society.[90]

Britain

The American dream regarding home ownership had little resonance before the 1980s.[91] In the 1980s, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher worked to create a similar dream, by selling public-housing units to their tenants. Her Conservative Party called for more home ownership: "HOMES OF OUR OWN: To most people ownership means first and foremost a home of their own ... We should like in time to improve on existing legislation with a realistic grants scheme to assist first-time buyers of cheaper homes."[92] Guest calls this Thatcher's approach to the American Dream.[93] Knights and McCabe argue that "a reflection and reinforcement of the American Dream has been the emphasis on individualism as extolled by Margaret Thatcher and epitomized by the 'enterprise' culture."[94]

Russia

Since the fall of communism in the Soviet Union in 1991, the American Dream has fascinated Russians.[95] The first post-Communist leader Boris Yeltsin embraced the "American way" and teamed up with Harvard University free market economists Jeffrey Sachs and Robert Allison to give Russia economic shock therapy in the 1990s. The newly independent Russian media idealized America and endorsed shock therapy for the economy.[96] In 2008 Russian President Dmitry Medvedev lamented the fact that 77% of Russia's 142 million people live "cooped up" in apartment buildings. In 2010 his administration announced a plan for widespread home ownership: "Call it the Russian Dream", said Alexander Braverman, the Director of the Federal Fund for the Promotion of Housing Construction Development. In 2010, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, worried about his nation's very low birth rate, said he hoped home ownership would inspire Russians "to have more babies".[97]

China

 
Shanghai in 2019

The Chinese Dream describes a set of ideals in the People's Republic of China. It is used by journalists, government officials and activists to describe the aspiration of individual self-improvement in Chinese society. Although the phrase has been used previously by Western journalists and scholars,[98][99] a translation of a New York Times article written by the American journalist Thomas Friedman, "China Needs Its Own Dream", has been credited with popularizing the concept in China.[99] He attributes the term to Peggy Liu and the environmental NGO JUCCCE's China Dream project,[100][101] which defines the Chinese Dream as sustainable development.[101] In 2013, China's new paramount leader Xi Jinping began promoting the phrase as a slogan, leading to its widespread use in the Chinese media.[102]

The concept of the Chinese Dream is very similar to the idea of the American Dream. It stresses entrepreneurship and glorifies a generation of self-made men and women in post-reform China, such as rural immigrants who moved to the urban centers and improved their living standards and social life. The Chinese Dream can be interpreted as the collective consciousness of Chinese people during the era of social transformation and economic progress. The idea was put forward by Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping on November 29, 2012. The government hoped to revitalize China, while promoting innovation and technology to boost the international prestige of China. In this light, the Chinese Dream, like the American Dream, is a nationalistic concept as well, providing a vision of a sort of Chinese exceptionalism.

According to Ellen Brown, writing in 2019, over 90% of Chinese families own their own homes, giving the country one of the highest rates of home ownership in the world.[103]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Posterity" is a now-archaic term referring to one's descendants.

References

  1. ^ "Lesson Plan: The American Dream". Library of Congress. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  2. ^ Kamp, David (April 2009). "Rethinking the American Dream". Vanity Fair. from the original on May 30, 2009. Retrieved June 20, 2009.
  3. ^ "Global education and the 'American Dream'". University World News. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  4. ^ McCarthy, Niall. "Which Countries Have The Highest Levels Of Labor Union Membership? [Infographic]". Forbes. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  5. ^ "Perspective | The big problem with the American Dream". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  6. ^ a b Kim, Eunji (2022). "Entertaining Beliefs in Economic Mobility". American Journal of Political Science. 67: 39–54. doi:10.1111/ajps.12702. ISSN 0092-5853. S2CID 247443342.
  7. ^ "In 2020, do people see the American Dream as attainable? | YouGov". today.yougov.com. Retrieved November 14, 2022.
  8. ^ Hanson, Sandra L. (December 2, 2023). "Whose Dream?". Whose Dream? Gender and the American Dream. Temple University Press. pp. 77–104. ISBN 9781439903148. JSTOR j.ctt14bt97n.8. Retrieved November 30, 2023.
  9. ^ Lord Dunmore to Lord Dartmouth, December 24, 1774, quoted in John Miller, Origins of the American Revolution (1944) p. 77
  10. ^ "The Declaration of Independence and the American Dream | History News Network". historynewsnetwork.org. Retrieved November 30, 2023.
  11. ^ F. W. Bogen, The German in America (Boston, 1851), quoted in Stephen Ozment, A Mighty Fortress: A New History of the German People (2004) pp. 170–71
  12. ^ H. W. Brands, The age of gold: the California Gold Rush and the new American dream (2003) p. 442.
  13. ^ Tyrrell, Ian (2015). Transnational Nation: United States History in Global Perspective since 1789 (2nd ed.). Palgrave MacMillan. ISBN 978-1137338549.
  14. ^ Turner, Frederick Jackson (1920). "The Significance of the Frontier in American History". The Frontier in American History. p. 293.
  15. ^ Turner, The Frontier in American History (1920) chapter 1
  16. ^ Bogue, Allan G. (1994). "Frederick Jackson Turner Reconsidered". The History Teacher. 27 (2). p. 195. doi:10.2307/494720. JSTOR 494720.
  17. ^ a b c Adams, James Truslow (September 29, 2017). The Epic of America. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-30410-8.
  18. ^ Quoted in James T. Kloppenberg, The Virtues of Liberalism (1998). p. 147
  19. ^ J. A. Leo Lemay, "Franklin's Autobiography and the American Dream", in J. A. Leo Lemay and P. M. Zall, eds. Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography (Norton Critical Editions, 1986) pp. 349–360
  20. ^ James E. Miller, Jr., "My Antonia and the American Dream" Prairie Schooner 48, no. 2 (Summer 1974) pp. 112–123.
  21. ^ Harold Bloom and Blake Hobby, eds. The American Dream (2009)
  22. ^ Nicholas Canaday, Jr., "Albee's The American Dream and the Existential Vacuum". South Central Bulletin Vol. 26, No. 4 (Winter 1966) pp. 28–34
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Further reading

  • Adams, James Truslow. (1931). The Epic of America (Little, Brown, and Co. 1931)
  • Brueggemann, John. Rich, Free, and Miserable: The Failure of Success in America (Rowman & Littlefield; 2010) 233 pages; links discontent among middle-class Americans to the extension of market thinking into every aspect of life.
  • Chomsky, Noam. Requiem for the American Dream: The 10 Principles of Concentration of Wealth & Power. Seven Stories Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1609807368
  • Chua, Chen Lok. "Two Chinese Versions of the American Dream: The Golden Mountain in Lin Yutang and Maxine Hong Kingston", MELUS Vol. 8, No. 4, The Ethnic American Dream (Winter, 1981), pp. 61–70 in JSTOR
  • Churchwell, Sarah. Behold, America: The Entangled History of 'America First' and 'the American Dream' (2018). 368 pp. online review
  • Cullen, Jim. The American dream: a short history of an idea that shaped a nation, Oxford University Press US, 2004. ISBN 0195173252
  • Hanson, Sandra L., and John Zogby, "The Polls – Trends", Public Opinion Quarterly, Sept 2010, Vol. 74, Issue 3, pp. 570–584
  • Hanson, Sandra L. and John Kenneth White, ed. The American Dream in the 21st Century (Temple University Press; 2011); 168 pages; essays by sociologists and other scholars how on the American Dream relates to politics, religion, race, gender, and generation.
  • Hopper, Kenneth, and William Hopper. The Puritan Gift: Reclaiming the American Dream Amidst Global Financial Chaos (2009), argues the Dream was devised by British entrepreneurs who build the American economy
  • Johnson, Heather Beth. The American dream and the power of wealth: choosing schools and inheriting inequality in the land of opportunity, CRC Press, 2006. ISBN 0415952395
  • Levinson, Julie. The American Success Myth on Film (Palgrave Macmillan; 2012) 220 pages
  • Lieu, Nhi T. The American Dream in Vietnamese (U. of Minnesota Press, 2011) 186 pages ISBN 978-0816665709
  • Ownby, Ted. American Dreams in Mississippi: Consumers, Poverty, and Culture 1830–1998 (University of North Carolina Press, 1999)
  • Samuel, Lawrence R. The American Dream: A Cultural History (Syracuse University Press; 2012) 241 pages; identifies six distinct eras since the phrase was coined in 1931.

External links

american, dream, other, uses, disambiguation, national, ethos, united, states, ideals, including, representative, democracy, rights, liberty, equality, which, freedom, interpreted, opportunity, individual, prosperity, success, well, chance, upward, social, mob. For other uses see American Dream disambiguation The American Dream is the national ethos of the United States a set of ideals including representative democracy rights liberty and equality in which freedom is interpreted as the opportunity for individual prosperity and success as well as the chance for upward social mobility for each according to ability and achievement through hard work in a capitalist society with many challenges but few formal barriers During the mid 19th to the early 20th century in the United States for many immigrants the Statue of Liberty Liberty Enlightening the World in New York Harbor was their first view of the country In this role it signified new opportunities for Americans and evolved into a symbol of the American Dream The term American Dream was popularized by James Truslow Adams in 1931 saying that life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement regardless of social class or circumstances of birth 1 Proponents of the American Dream often claim that its tenets originate from the United States Declaration of Independence which states that all men are created equal with the right to life liberty and the pursuit of happiness 2 The Preamble to the Constitution of the United States is used similarly and states that the Constitution s purpose is to in part secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity a Throughout American history there have been critics of its national ethos Some critics have said that American focus on individualism and capital results in materialism consumerism and a lack of worker solidarity 3 In 2015 only 10 5 percent of American workers were members of a labor union 4 needs update The American Dream has also been criticized as a product of American exceptionalism as it does not acknowledge the hardships many Americans face namely in regards to the legacies of American slavery and Native American genocide as well as other examples of discriminatory violence 5 Belief in the American Dream is often inversely associated with rates of national disillusionment Evidence indicates that upward economic mobility has declined and income inequality has risen in the United States in recent decades 6 In 2020 a poll found 54 percent of American adults thought the American Dream was attainable for them 28 percent believed it was unattainable for them personally while 9 percent rejected the idea of the American Dream entirely Younger generations were also less likely to believe in the American Dream than their older counterparts 7 Women are more skeptical of achieving the American Dream than men are 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 18th century 1 2 19th century 1 3 20th century 2 Literature 2 1 American ideals 2 2 Literary commentary 3 Political leaders 4 Public opinion 5 Four American Dreams 6 Other parts of the world 6 1 After World War II 6 2 Britain 6 3 Russia 6 4 China 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistoryThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2022 The meaning of the American Dream has changed over the course of history and includes both personal components such as home ownership and upward mobility as well as a global vision for cultural hegemony and diplomacy 18th century Historically the Dream originated in colonial mystique regarding frontier life As John Murray 4th Earl of Dunmore the colonial Governor of Virginia noted in 1774 the Americans for ever imagine the Lands further off are still better than those upon which they are already settled He added that if they attained Paradise they would move on if they heard of a better place farther west 9 The idea of the American Dream is ever evolving and changing When the Declaration of Independence was signed on July 4 1776 the founding fathers believed that this would ratify the role of government and society in the United States Jim Cullen notability claims Ever since the Declaration of Independence has functioned as the banner of the American Dream one repeatedly waved by figures that included women s rights activists populists homosexuals and anyone who has ever believed that happiness can not only be pursued but attained The U S Constitution which marked the other bookend of the nation s creation lacks the mythic resonances of the Declaration though it takes little reflection to see that it is the backdrop if not the foundation for all American Dreams Whatever their disagreements about its scope or character most Americans would agree that their national government is legitimate insofar as it permits a level playing field of dreams Many of us have doubts that the government does serve this function few have doubts that it should 10 19th century Many well educated Germans who fled the failed 1848 revolution found the United States more politically free than their homeland which they believed to be a hierarchical and aristocratic society that determined the ceiling for their aspirations One of them said The German emigrant comes into a country free from the despotism privileged orders and monopolies intolerable taxes and constraints in matters of belief and conscience Everyone can travel and settle wherever he pleases No passport is demanded no police mingles in his affairs or hinders his movements Fidelity and merit are the only sources of honor here The rich stand on the same footing as the poor the scholar is not a mug above the most humble mechanics no German ought to be ashamed to pursue any occupation In America wealth and possession of real estate confer not the least political right on its owner above what the poorest citizen has Nor are there nobility privileged orders or standing armies to weaken the physical and moral power of the people nor are there swarms of public functionaries to devour in idleness credit for Above all there are no princes and corrupt courts representing the so called divine right of birth In such a country the talents energy and perseverance of a person have far greater opportunity to display than in monarchies 11 The discovery of gold in California in 1849 brought in a hundred thousand men looking for their fortune overnight and a few did find it Thus was born the California Dream of instant success Historian H W Brands noted that in the years after the Gold Rush the California Dream spread across the nation The old American Dream was the dream of the Puritans of Benjamin Franklin s Poor Richard of men and women content to accumulate their modest fortunes a little at a time year by year by year The new dream was the dream of instant wealth won in a twinkling by audacity and good luck This golden dream became a prominent part of the American psyche only after Sutter s Mill 12 During the 18th century provided Americans with new sources of wealth and looking for new ways of travel When looking at immigration in history it is important to consider the different experiences of gender as much as race There are often times tensions between economic and political agendas By studying the global tensions and events outside of the United States helps to form a broader viewpoint and perspective of the past After 1776 the United States became a part of the global connections improving marketing opportunities This paragraph highlights the complex relationships between global integration within American history These complicated transnational networks themselves are not the only story Along with global integration went attempts to assert national distinctiveness amid growing global competition Americans conceived of and responded to these pressures by striving to create national economic independence because they wanted to maintain political and social independence Thus there was tension between the economic imperatives of global integration and national political debates and economic agendas such as the enhancement of national security through a strong industrial and financial base 13 Historian Frederick Jackson Turner in 1893 advanced the frontier thesis under which American democracy and the American Dream were formed by the American frontier He stressed the process the moving frontier line and the impact it had on pioneers going through the process He also stressed results especially that American democracy was the primary result along with egalitarianism a lack of interest in high culture and violence American democracy was born of no theorist s dream it was not carried in the Susan Constant to Virginia nor in the Mayflower to Plymouth It came out of the American forest and it gained new strength each time it touched a new frontier said Turner 14 In Turner s thesis the American frontier established liberty by releasing Americans from European mindsets and eroding old dysfunctional customs The frontier had no need for standing armies established churches aristocrats or nobles nor for landed gentry who controlled most of the land and charged heavy rents Frontier land was free for the taking Turner first announced his thesis in a paper entitled The Significance of the Frontier in American History delivered to the American Historical Association in 1893 in Chicago He won wide acclaim among historians and intellectuals Turner elaborated on the theme in his advanced history lectures and in a series of essays published over the next 25 years published along with his initial paper as The Frontier in American History 15 Turner s emphasis on the importance of the frontier in shaping American character influenced the interpretation found in thousands of scholarly histories By the time Turner died in 1932 60 of the leading history departments in the U S were teaching courses in frontier history along Turnerian lines 16 nbsp Americanization of California 1932 by Dean Cornwell20th century Freelance writer James Truslow Adams popularized the phrase American Dream in his 1931 book Epic of America 17 But there has been also the American dream that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for every man with opportunity for each according to his ability or achievement It is a difficult dream for the European upper classes to interpret adequately and too many of us ourselves have grown weary and mistrustful of it It is not a dream of motor cars and high wages merely but a dream of social order in which each man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable and be recognized by others for what they are regardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position The American dream that has lured tens of millions of all nations to our shores in the past century has not been a dream of merely material plenty though that has doubtlessly counted heavily It has been much more than that It has been a dream of being able to grow to fullest development as man and woman unhampered by the barriers which had slowly been erected in the older civilizations unrepressed by social orders which had developed for the benefit of classes rather than for the simple human being of any and every class Adams contended that extreme wealth inequality was among the worst enemies of the American Dream and said that 17 So long also as we are ourselves content with a mere extension of the material basis of existence with the multiplying of our material possessions it is absurd to think that the men who can utilize that public attitude for the gaining of infinite wealth and power for themselves will abandon both to become spiritual leaders of a democracy that despises spiritual things He also said that the American institution that best exemplified the American dream was the Library of Congress he contrasted it with European libraries of the time which restricted access to many of their works and argued that the Library as an institution funded by and meant to uphold democracy was an example of democratic government s ability to uplift and equalize the people that it ruled over and was ruled by in order to save itself from a takeover by the elite The Library also offered an opportunity for the whole nation to come together in thoughtful pursuit of a common good which Adams claimed needed to be carried out in all departments of our national life in order to make the American Dream a reality 17 Martin Luther King Jr in his Letter from a Birmingham Jail 1963 rooted the civil rights movement in the African American quest for the American Dream 18 We will win our freedom because the sacred heritage of our nation and the eternal will of God are embodied in our echoing demands when these disinherited children of God sat down at lunch counters they were in reality standing up for what is best in the American dream and for the most sacred values in our Judeo Christian heritage thereby bringing our nation back to those great wells of democracy which were dug deep by the Founding Fathers in their formulation of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence LiteratureThe concept of the American Dream has been used in popular discourse and scholars have traced its use in American literature ranging from the Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin 19 to Mark Twain s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 1884 Willa Cather s My Antonia 20 F Scott Fitzgerald s The Great Gatsby 1925 Theodore Dreiser s An American Tragedy 1925 and Toni Morrison s Song of Solomon 1977 21 Other writers who used the American Dream theme include Hunter S Thompson Edward Albee 22 John Steinbeck 23 Langston Hughes 24 and Giannina Braschi 25 In 2006 Dr Guiyou Huang from St Thomas University in Florida wrote a paper regarding the American Dream as a recurring theme in the fiction of Asian Americans 26 27 American ideals Many American authors added American ideals to their work as a theme or other reoccurring idea to get their point across 28 There are many ideals that appear in American literature such as that all people are equal the United States is the land of opportunity independence is valued the American Dream is attainable and everyone can succeed with hard work and determination John Winthrop also wrote about this term called American exceptionalism This ideology refers to the idea that Americans are as a nation elect 29 Literary commentary nbsp European governments worried that their best young people would leave for America distributed posters like this to frighten them this 1869 Swedish anti emigration poster contrasts Per Svensson s dream of the American idyll left and the reality of his life in the wilderness right where he is menaced by a mountain lion a big snake and wild Indians who are scalping and disembowelling someone 30 The American Dream has been credited with helping to build a cohesive American experience but has also been blamed for inflated expectations 31 Some commentators have noted that despite deep seated belief in the egalitarian American Dream the modern American wealth structure still perpetuates racial and class inequalities between generations 32 One sociologist notes that advantage and disadvantage are not always connected to individual successes or failures but often to prior position in a social group 32 Since the 1920s numerous authors such as Sinclair Lewis in his 1922 novel Babbitt and F Scott Fitzgerald in his 1925 classic The Great Gatsby satirized or ridiculed materialism in the chase for the American dream For example Jay Gatsby s death mirrors the American Dream s demise reflecting the pessimism of modern day Americans 33 The American Dream is a main theme in the book by John Steinbeck Of Mice and Men The two friends George and Lennie dream of their own piece of land with a ranch so they can live off the fatta the lan and just enjoy a better life The book later shows that not everyone can achieve the American Dream although it is possible to achieve for a few A lot of people follow the American Dream to achieve a greater chance of becoming rich Some posit that the ease of achieving the American Dream changes with technological advances availability of infrastructure and information government regulations state of the economy and with the evolving cultural values of American demographics In 1949 Arthur Miller wrote Death of a Salesman in which the American Dream is a fruitless pursuit Similarly in 1971 Hunter S Thompson depicted in Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas A Savage Journey Into the Heart of the American Dream a dark psychedelic reflection of the concept successfully illustrated only in wasted pop culture excess 34 The novel Requiem for a Dream by Hubert Selby Jr is an exploration of the pursuit of American success as it turns delirious and lethal told through the ensuing tailspin of its main characters George Carlin famously wrote the joke it s called the American dream because you have to be asleep to believe it 35 36 Carlin pointed to the big wealthy business interests that control things and make all the important decisions as having a greater influence than an individual s choice 35 Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and leftist activist Chris Hedges echos this sentiment in his 2012 book Days of Destruction Days of Revolt 37 The vaunted American dream the idea that life will get better that progress is inevitable if we obey the rules and work hard that material prosperity is assured has been replaced by a hard and bitter truth The American dream we now know is a lie We will all be sacrificed The virus of corporate abuse the perverted belief that only corporate profit matters has spread to outsource our jobs cut the budgets of our schools close our libraries and plague our communities with foreclosures and unemployment The American Dream and the sometimes dark response to it has been a long standing theme in American film 38 Many counterculture films of the 1960s and 1970s ridiculed the traditional quest for the American Dream For example Easy Rider 1969 directed by Dennis Hopper shows the characters making a pilgrimage in search of the true America in terms of the hippie movement drug use and communal lifestyles 39 Political leadersScholars have explored the American Dream theme in the careers of numerous political leaders including Henry Kissinger 40 Hillary Clinton 41 Benjamin Franklin and Abraham Lincoln 42 The theme has been used for many local leaders as well such as Jose Antonio Navarro the Tejano leader 1795 1871 who served in the legislatures of Coahuila y Texas the Republic of Texas and the State of Texas 43 In 2006 U S Senator Barack Obama wrote a memoir The Audacity of Hope Thoughts on Reclaiming the American Dream It was this interpretation of the American Dream for a young black man that helped establish his statewide and national reputations 44 45 The exact meaning of the Dream became a minor partisan political issue in the 2008 and 2012 elections 46 Political conflicts to some degree have been ameliorated by the shared values of all parties in the expectation that the American Dream will resolve many difficulties and conflicts 47 Public opinionThe ethos today implies an opportunity for Americans to achieve prosperity through hard work According to the Dream this includes the opportunity for one s children to grow up and receive a good education and career without artificial barriers It is the opportunity to make individual choices without the prior restrictions that limited people according to their class caste religion race or ethnicity Immigrants to the United States sponsored ethnic newspapers in their own language the editors typically promoted the American Dream 48 Lawrence Samuel argues For many in both the working class and the middle class upward mobility has served as the heart and soul of the American Dream the prospect of betterment and to improve one s lot for oneself and one s children much of what this country is all about Work hard save a little send the kids to college so they can do better than you did and retire happily to a warmer climate has been the script we have all been handed 49 A key element of the American Dream is promoting opportunity for one s children Johnson interviewing parents says This was one of the most salient features of the interview data parents regardless of background relied heavily on the American Dream to understand the possibilities for children especially their own children 50 Rank et al argue The hopes and optimism that Americans possess pertain not only to their own lives but to their children s lives as well A fundamental aspect of the American Dream has always been the expectation that the next generation should do better than the previous generation 51 A lot of Americans think the U S has more social mobility than other western industrialized countries This study using medians instead of averages makes it abundantly clear that we have less Your circumstances at birth specifically what your parents do for a living are an even bigger factor in how far you get in life than we had previously realized Generations of Americans considered the United States to be a land of opportunity This research raises some sobering questions about that image Michael Hout Professor of Sociology at New York University 2018 52 Hanson and Zogby 2010 report on numerous public opinion polls that since the 1980s have explored the meaning of the concept for Americans and their expectations for its future In these polls a majority of Americans consistently reported that for their family the American Dream is more about spiritual happiness than material goods Majorities state that working hard is the most important element for getting ahead However an increasing minority stated that hard work and determination does not guarantee success 53 In 2010 most Americans predicted that achieving the Dream with fair means would become increasingly difficult for future generations They were increasingly pessimistic about the opportunity for the working class to get ahead on the other hand they were increasingly optimistic about the opportunities available to poor people and to new immigrants Furthermore most supported programs to make special efforts to help minorities get ahead 53 In a 2013 poll by YouGov 41 of responders said it is impossible for most to achieve the American Dream while 38 said it is still possible 54 Most Americans perceive a college education as the ticket to the American Dream 55 Some recent when observers warn that soaring student loan debt crisis and shortages of good jobs may undermine this ticket 56 The point was illustrated in The Fallen American Dream a documentary film that details the concept of the American Dream from its historical origins to its current perception 57 nbsp Wealth inequality in the United States increased from 1989 to 2013 58 Research published in 2013 shows that the U S provides alongside the United Kingdom and Spain the least economic mobility of any of 13 rich democratic countries in the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD 59 60 Prior research suggested that the United States shows roughly average levels of occupational upward mobility and shows lower rates of income mobility than comparable societies 61 62 Jo Blanden et al report the idea of the U S as the land of opportunity persists and clearly seems misplaced 63 According to these studies by international standards the United States has an unusually low level of intergenerational mobility our parents income is highly predictive of our incomes as adults Intergenerational mobility in the United States is lower than in France Germany Sweden Canada Finland Norway and Denmark Research in 2006 found that among high income countries for which comparable estimates are available only the United Kingdom had a lower rate of mobility than the United States 64 Economist Isabel Sawhill concluded that this challenges the notion of America as the land of opportunity 65 66 67 Several public figures and commentators from David Frum to Richard G Wilkinson have said that the American Dream is better realized in Denmark which is ranked as having the highest social mobility in the OECD 68 69 70 71 72 In the U S 50 of a father s income position is inherited by his son In contrast the amount in Norway or Canada is less than 20 Moreover in the U S 8 of children raised in the bottom 20 of the climbed to the top 20 as adult while the figure in Denmark is nearly double at 15 73 74 75 In 2015 economist Joseph Stiglitz stated Maybe we should be calling the American Dream the Scandinavian Dream 76 A 2023 paper written by academics at Bocconi University the Rockwool Foundation and Stockholm University found that Intergenerational poverty in the U S is four times stronger than in Denmark and Germany and twice as strong as in Australia and the UK and that an American child who grows up in poverty has a 43 percentage point higher mean poverty exposure during early adulthood relative to an adult with no child poverty exposure the highest of the five countries and exceeding the next highest by over 20 percentage points The researchers found that the persistence of poverty is strongly connected to tax rates and what they call transfer insurance effects which can be considered as akin to a social safety net and that the U S is the archetype of a liberal and residualist welfare state featuring stratified access to higher education and employment strong earnings returns to higher education and a comparatively weak welfare state to insure against risks in adulthood as well as that exposure to childhood poverty is particularly severe in the US 77 A 2017 study stated that the UK Canada and Denmark all offered a greater chance of social mobility 78 Black families were stated to be disadvantaged relative to white families when it comes to both upward mobility from the bottom and downward mobility from the top according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago with social mobility nationwide appearing to have declined since 1980 79 Social mobility can also vary widely geographically according to a 2014 paper with the Southeast and lower East North Central states ranking near the bottom 80 In the United States home ownership is sometimes used as a proxy for achieving the promised prosperity home ownership has been a status symbol separating the middle classes from the poor 81 Sometimes the American Dream is identified with success in sports or how working class immigrants seek to join the American way of life 82 According to a 2020 American Journal of Political Science study Americans become less likely to believe in the attainability of the American dream as income inequality increases 83 A 2022 study in the same journal found that exposure to rags to riches narratives in entertainment make Americans more likely to believe in upward mobility 6 Four American DreamsOwnby 1999 identifies four American Dreams that the new consumer culture of the early 20th century addressed The Dream of Abundance offering a cornucopia of material goods to all Americans making them proud to be the richest society on earth The Dream of a Democracy of Goods whereby everyone had access to the same products regardless of race gender ethnicity or class thereby challenging the aristocratic norms of the rest of the world where only the rich or well connected were granted access to luxury The Dream of Freedom of Choice with its ever expanding variety of good allowed people to fashion their own particular lifestyle The Dream of Novelty in which ever changing fashions new models and unexpected new products broadened the consumer experience in terms of purchasing skills and awareness of the market and challenged the conservatism of traditional society culture and politics Ownby acknowledges that the American Dreams of the new consumer culture radiated out from the major cities but notes that they quickly penetrated the most rural and most isolated areas such as rural Mississippi With the arrival of affordable automobiles such as the Ford Model T in the 1910s consumers in rural America were no longer forced to only buy from local general stores with their limited merchandise and high prices and could instead visit cheaper better stocked shops in towns and cities Ownby demonstrates that poor black Mississippians shared in the new consumer culture and it motivated the more ambitious to move to Memphis or Chicago 84 85 Other parts of the worldThe aspirations of the American Dream in the broad sense of upward mobility have been systematically spread to other nations since the 1890s as American missionaries and businessmen consciously sought to spread the Dream says Rosenberg Looking at American business religious missionaries philanthropies Hollywood labor unions and U S government agencies she says they saw their mission not in catering to foreign elites but instead reaching the world s masses in a democratic fashion They linked mass production mass marketing and technological improvement to an enlightened democratic spirit In the emerging litany of the American dream what historian Daniel Boorstin later termed a democracy of things would disprove both Malthus s predictions of scarcity and Marx s of class conflict It was she says a vision of global social progress 86 Rosenberg calls the overseas version of the American Dream liberal developmentalism and identified five critical components 1 belief that other nations could and should replicate America s own developmental experience 2 faith in private free enterprise 3 support for free or open access for trade and investment 4 promotion of free flow of information and culture and 5 growing acceptance of U S governmental activity to protect private enterprise and to stimulate and regulate American participation in international economic and cultural exchange 87 Knights and McCabe argued American management gurus have taken the lead in exporting the ideas By the latter half of the twentieth century they were truly global and through them the American Dream continues to be transmitted repackaged and sold by an infantry of consultants and academics backed up by an artillery of books and videos 88 After World War II In West Germany after World War II says Reiner Pommerin the most intense motive was the longing for a better life more or less identical with the American dream which also became a German dream 89 Cassamagnaghi argues that to women in Italy after 1945 films and magazine stories about American life offered an American Dream New York City especially represented a sort of utopia where every sort of dream and desire could become true Italian women saw a model for their own emancipation from second class status in their patriarchal society 90 Britain The American dream regarding home ownership had little resonance before the 1980s 91 In the 1980s British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher worked to create a similar dream by selling public housing units to their tenants Her Conservative Party called for more home ownership HOMES OF OUR OWN To most people ownership means first and foremost a home of their own We should like in time to improve on existing legislation with a realistic grants scheme to assist first time buyers of cheaper homes 92 Guest calls this Thatcher s approach to the American Dream 93 Knights and McCabe argue that a reflection and reinforcement of the American Dream has been the emphasis on individualism as extolled by Margaret Thatcher and epitomized by the enterprise culture 94 Russia Since the fall of communism in the Soviet Union in 1991 the American Dream has fascinated Russians 95 The first post Communist leader Boris Yeltsin embraced the American way and teamed up with Harvard University free market economists Jeffrey Sachs and Robert Allison to give Russia economic shock therapy in the 1990s The newly independent Russian media idealized America and endorsed shock therapy for the economy 96 In 2008 Russian President Dmitry Medvedev lamented the fact that 77 of Russia s 142 million people live cooped up in apartment buildings In 2010 his administration announced a plan for widespread home ownership Call it the Russian Dream said Alexander Braverman the Director of the Federal Fund for the Promotion of Housing Construction Development In 2010 Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin worried about his nation s very low birth rate said he hoped home ownership would inspire Russians to have more babies 97 China Main article Chinese Dream nbsp Shanghai in 2019The Chinese Dream describes a set of ideals in the People s Republic of China It is used by journalists government officials and activists to describe the aspiration of individual self improvement in Chinese society Although the phrase has been used previously by Western journalists and scholars 98 99 a translation of a New York Times article written by the American journalist Thomas Friedman China Needs Its Own Dream has been credited with popularizing the concept in China 99 He attributes the term to Peggy Liu and the environmental NGO JUCCCE s China Dream project 100 101 which defines the Chinese Dream as sustainable development 101 In 2013 China s new paramount leader Xi Jinping began promoting the phrase as a slogan leading to its widespread use in the Chinese media 102 The concept of the Chinese Dream is very similar to the idea of the American Dream It stresses entrepreneurship and glorifies a generation of self made men and women in post reform China such as rural immigrants who moved to the urban centers and improved their living standards and social life The Chinese Dream can be interpreted as the collective consciousness of Chinese people during the era of social transformation and economic progress The idea was put forward by Chinese Communist Party General Secretary Xi Jinping on November 29 2012 The government hoped to revitalize China while promoting innovation and technology to boost the international prestige of China In this light the Chinese Dream like the American Dream is a nationalistic concept as well providing a vision of a sort of Chinese exceptionalism According to Ellen Brown writing in 2019 over 90 of Chinese families own their own homes giving the country one of the highest rates of home ownership in the world 103 See alsoAchievement ideology American way Empire of Liberty New DreamNotes Posterity is a now archaic term referring to one s descendants References Lesson Plan The American Dream Library of Congress Retrieved October 30 2020 Kamp David April 2009 Rethinking the American Dream Vanity Fair Archived from the original on May 30 2009 Retrieved June 20 2009 Global education and the American Dream University World News Retrieved November 14 2022 McCarthy Niall Which Countries Have The Highest Levels Of Labor Union Membership Infographic Forbes Retrieved November 14 2022 Perspective The big problem with the American Dream Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved November 14 2022 a b Kim Eunji 2022 Entertaining Beliefs in Economic Mobility American Journal of Political Science 67 39 54 doi 10 1111 ajps 12702 ISSN 0092 5853 S2CID 247443342 In 2020 do people see the American Dream as attainable YouGov today yougov com Retrieved November 14 2022 Hanson Sandra L December 2 2023 Whose Dream Whose Dream Gender and the American Dream Temple University Press pp 77 104 ISBN 9781439903148 JSTOR j ctt14bt97n 8 Retrieved November 30 2023 Lord Dunmore to Lord Dartmouth December 24 1774 quoted in John Miller Origins of the American Revolution 1944 p 77 The Declaration of Independence and the American Dream History News Network historynewsnetwork org Retrieved November 30 2023 F W Bogen The German in America Boston 1851 quoted in Stephen Ozment A Mighty Fortress A New History of the German People 2004 pp 170 71 H W Brands The age of gold the California Gold Rush and the new American dream 2003 p 442 Tyrrell Ian 2015 Transnational Nation United States History in Global Perspective since 1789 2nd ed Palgrave MacMillan ISBN 978 1137338549 Turner Frederick Jackson 1920 The Significance of the Frontier in American History The Frontier in American History p 293 Turner The Frontier in American History 1920 chapter 1 Bogue Allan G 1994 Frederick Jackson Turner Reconsidered The History Teacher 27 2 p 195 doi 10 2307 494720 JSTOR 494720 a b c Adams James Truslow September 29 2017 The Epic of America Routledge ISBN 978 1 351 30410 8 Quoted in James T Kloppenberg The Virtues of Liberalism 1998 p 147 J A Leo Lemay Franklin s Autobiography and the American Dream in J A Leo Lemay and P M Zall eds Benjamin Franklin s Autobiography Norton Critical Editions 1986 pp 349 360 James E Miller Jr My Antonia and the American Dream Prairie Schooner 48 no 2 Summer 1974 pp 112 123 Harold Bloom and Blake Hobby eds The American Dream 2009 Nicholas Canaday Jr Albee s The American Dream and the Existential Vacuum South Central Bulletin Vol 26 No 4 Winter 1966 pp 28 34 Hayley Haugen ed The American Dream in John Steinbeck s of Mice and Men 2010 Lloyd W Brown The American Dream and the Legacy of Revolution in the Poetry of Langston Hughes Studies in Black Literature Spring 1976 pp 16 18 Riofio John 2015 Fractured Dreams Life and Debt in United States of Banana PDF Biennial Conference on Latina o Utopias Literatures Latina o Utopias Futures Forms and the Will of Literature Archived from the original PDF on October 19 2017 Retrieved May 19 2015 Braschi s novel is a scathing critique of over wrought concepts of Liberty and the American Dream It connects the dots between 9 11 the suppression of individual liberties and the fragmentation of the individuals and communities in favor of a collective worship of the larger dictates of the market and the economy Anupama Jain 2011 How to Be South Asian in America Narratives of Ambivalence and Belonging Temple University Press ISBN 978 1439903032 Retrieved November 27 2018 Guiyou Huang The Columbia guide to Asian American literature since 1945 2006 pp 44 67 85 94 Neumann Henry Teaching American Ideals through Literature Washington Government Printing Office 1918 Print Symposium The Role of the Judge in the Twenty first Century Boston Boston U Law School 2006 Print The pictures originally illustrated a cautionary tale published in 1869 in the Swedish periodical Lasning for folket the organ of the Society for the Propagation of Useful Knowledge Sallskapet for nyttiga kunskapers spridande H Arnold Barton A Folk Divided Homeland Swedes and Swedish Americans 152547256425264562564562462654666 FILS DE Uppsala 1994 p 71 Greider William The Nation May 6 2009 The Future of the American Dream a b Johnson 2006 pp 6 10 The crucial point is not that inequalities exist but that they are being perpetuated in recurrent patterns they are not always the result of individual success or failure nor are they randomly distributed throughout the population In the contemporary United States the structure of wealth systematically transmits race and class inequalities through generations despite deep rooted belief otherwise Dalton Gross and MaryJean Gross Understanding The Great Gatsby 1998 p 5 Stephen E Ambrose Douglas Brinkley Witness to America 1999 p 518 a b Smith Mark A 2010 The Mobilization and Influence of Business Interests in L Sandy Maisel Jeffrey M Berry 2010 The Oxford Handbook of American Political Parties and Interest Groups p 460 George Carlin and the American Dream Scheerpost April 17 2023 Retrieved July 23 2023 Chris Hedges and Joe Sacco 2012 Days of Destruction Days of Revolt pp 226 227 Nation Books ISBN 1568586434 Gordon B Arnold Projecting the End of the American Dream Hollywood s Vision of U S Decline Santa Barbara CA Praeger 2013 Barbara Klinger The Road to Dystopia Landscaping the Nation in Easy Rider in Steven Cohan ed The Road Movie Book 1997 Jeremi Suri Henry Kissinger the American Dream and the Jewish Immigrant Experience in the Cold War Diplomatic History Nov 2008 Vol 32 Issue 5 pp 719 747 Dan Dervin The Dream Life of Hillary Clinton Journal of Psychohistory Fall 2008 Vol 36 Issue 2 pp 157 162 Edward J Blum Lincoln s American Dream Clashing Political Perspectives Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association Summer 2007 Vol 28 Issue 2 pp 90 93 David McDonald Jose Antonio Navarro In Search of the American Dream in Nineteenth Century Texas Texas State Historical Association 2011 Deborah F Atwater Senator Barack Obama The Rhetoric of Hope and the American Dream Journal of Black Studies Nov 2007 Vol 38 Issue 2 pp 121 129 Willie J Harrell The Reality of American Life Has Strayed From Its Myths Journal of Black Studies Sep 2010 Vol 41 Issue 1 pp 164 183 online Matthias Maass Which Way to Take the American Dream The U S Elections of 2008 and 2010 as a Struggle for Political Ownership of the American Dream Australasian Journal of American Studies July 2012 vol 31 pp 25 41 James Laxer and Robert Laxer The Liberal Idea of Canada Pierre Trudeau and the Question of Canada s Survival 1977 pp 83 85 Leara D Rhodes The Ethnic Press Shaping the American Dream Peter Lang Publishing 2010 Lawrence R Samuel 2012 The American Dream A Cultural History Syracuse UP p 7 ISBN 978 0815651871 Heather Beth Johnson 2014 American Dream and Power Wealth Routledge p 43 ISBN 978 1134728794 Mark Robert Rank et al 2014 Chasing the American Dream Understanding What Shapes Our Fortunes Oxford U P p 61 ISBN 978 0195377910 Lack of social mobility more of an occupational hazard than previously known a b Sandra L Hanson and John Zogby The Polls Trends Public Opinion Quarterly Sept 2010 Vol 74 Issue 3 pp 570 584 Henderson Ben American Dream Slipping Away But Hope Intact YouGov Retrieved August 8 2013 Americans View Higher Education as Key to American Dream Public Agenda May 2000 Donald L Barlett James B Steele 2012 The Betrayal of the American Dream PublicAffairs pp 125 126 ISBN 978 1586489700 The Fallen American Dream Archived June 30 2013 at archive today Trends in Family Wealth 1989 to 2013 Congressional Budget Office August 18 2016 Autor David May 23 2014 Skills education and the rise of earnings inequality among the other 99 percent Science Magazine vol 344 no 6186 pp 843 851 Bibcode 2014Sci 344 843A doi 10 1126 science 1251868 hdl 1721 1 96768 PMID 24855259 S2CID 5622764 Corak M 2013 Inequality from Generation to Generation The United States in Comparison In Rycroft RS ed The Economics of Inequality Poverty and Discrimination in the 21st Century ABC CLIO p 111 ISBN 978 0313396922 Beller Emily Hout Michael 2006 Intergenerational Social Mobility The United States in Comparative Perspective The Future of Children 16 2 19 36 doi 10 1353 foc 2006 0012 JSTOR 3844789 PMID 17036544 S2CID 26362679 Miles Corak How to Slide Down the Great Gatsby Curve Inequality Life Chances and Public Policy in the United States December 2012 Center for American Progress Jo Blanden Paul Gregg Stephen Machin April 2005 Intergenerational Mobility in Europe and North America PDF The Sutton Trust Archived from the original PDF on January 20 2013 CAP Understanding Mobility in America April 26 2006 Economic Mobility Is the American Dream Alive and Well Archived May 3 2012 at the Wayback Machine Economic Mobility Project May 2007 Obstacles to social mobility weaken equal opportunities and economic growth says OECD study Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD Economics Department February 10 2010 Harder for Americans to Rise From Lower Rungs By Jason DeParle January 4 2012 David Frum October 19 2011 The American Dream moves to Denmark The Week Retrieved December 12 2014 Wilkinson Richard Oct 2011 How economic inequality harms societies Archived February 27 2014 at the Wayback Machine transcript TED Quote featured on his personal profile on the TED website Retrieved December 13 2014 Diane Roberts January 17 2012 Want to get ahead Move to Denmark The Guardian Retrieved December 13 2014 Kerry Trueman October 7 2011 Looking for the American Dream Try Denmark The Huffington Post Retrieved December 13 2014 Matt O Brien August 3 2016 This country has figured out the only way to save the American Dream The Washington Post Retrieved September 18 2016 Rank Mark R Eppard Lawrence M March 13 2021 The American Dream of upward mobility is broken Look at the numbers The Guardian Comparing Economic Mobility archive nytimes com Retrieved October 20 2022 American Exceptionalism in a New Light A Comparison of Intergenerational Earnings Mobility in the Nordic Countries the United Kingdom and the United States www iza org Retrieved October 20 2022 Scandinavian Dream is true fix for America s income inequality CNN Money June 3 2015 Parolin Zachary Rafael P Schmitt Gosta Esping Andersen and Peter Fallesen 2023 The Intergenerational Persistence of Poverty in High income Countries OSF Preprints May 30 doi 10 31219 osf io tb3qz Costa Pedro Nicolaci da You re twice as likely to live the American Dream in Canada Business Insider Retrieved June 28 2023 Mazumder Bhash April 2022 Intergenerational Economic Mobility in the United States Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Retrieved June 28 2023 Chetty Raj Hendren Nathaniel Kline Patrick Saez Emmanuel 2014 Where is the Land of Opportunity The Geography of Intergenerational Mobility in the United States PDF Cambridge MA doi 10 3386 w19843 William M Rohe and Harry L Watson Chasing the American Dream New Perspectives on Affordable Homeownership 2007 Thomas M Tarapacki Chasing the American Dream Polish Americans in Sports 1995 Steve Wilson The Boys from Little Mexico A Season Chasing the American Dream 2010 is a true story of immigrant boys on a high school soccer team who struggle not only in their quest to win the state championship but also in their desire to adapt as strangers in a new land Wolak Jennifer Peterson David A M 2020 The Dynamic American Dream American Journal of Political Science 64 4 968 981 doi 10 1111 ajps 12522 ISSN 1540 5907 S2CID 219100278 Ted Ownby American Dreams in Mississippi Consumers Poverty and Culture 1830 1998 University of North Carolina Press 1999 Christopher Morris Shopping for America in Mississippi or How I Learn to Stop Complaining and Love the Pemberton Mall Reviews in American History March 2001 v 29 1 103 110 Emily S Rosenberg Spreading the American Dream American Economic and Cultural Expansion 1890 1945 1982 pp 22 23 Rosenberg Spreading the American Dream p 7 David Knights and Darren McCabe Organization and Innovation Guru Schemes and American Dreams 2003 p 35 Reiner Pommerin 1997 The American Impact on Postwar Germany Berghahn Books p 84 ISBN 978 1571810953 Cassamagnaghi Silvia New York nella stampa femminile italiana del secondo dopoguerra New York in the Italian women s press after World War II Storia Urbana Dec 2005 91 111 Niall Ferguson The Ascent of Money A Financial History of the World 2009 p 252 See Conservative manifesto 1979 Archived May 22 2013 at the Wayback Machine David E Guest Human Resource Management and the American Dream Journal of Management Studies 1990 27 4 pp 377 397 reprinted in Michael Poole Human Resource Management Origins Developments and Critical Analyses 1999 p 159 Knights and McCabe Organization and Innovation 2003 p 4 Richard M Ryan et al The American Dream in Russia Extrinsic Aspirations and Well Being in Two Cultures Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin Dec 1999 vol 25 no 12 pp 1509 1524 shows the Russian ideology converging toward the American one especially among men Donald J Raleigh 2011 Soviet Baby Boomers An Oral History of Russia s Cold War Generation Oxford U P p 331 ISBN 978 0199744343 Anastasia Ustinova Building the New Russian Dream One Home at a Time Bloomberg Business Week June 28 July 4 2010 pp 7 8 Fallows James May 3 2013 Today s China Notes Dreams Obstacles The Atlantic a b The role of Thomas Friedman The Economist May 6 2013 Fish Isaac Stone May 3 2013 Thomas Friedman I only deserve partial credit for coining the Chinese dream Foreign Policy a b China Dream JUCCCE Xi Jinping and the Chinese Dream The Economist May 4 2013 p 11 Brown Ellen June 13 2019 The American Dream Is Alive and Well in China Truthdig Retrieved June 15 2019 Further readingAdams James Truslow 1931 The Epic of America Little Brown and Co 1931 Brueggemann John Rich Free and Miserable The Failure of Success in America Rowman amp Littlefield 2010 233 pages links discontent among middle class Americans to the extension of market thinking into every aspect of life Chomsky Noam Requiem for the American Dream The 10 Principles of Concentration of Wealth amp Power Seven Stories Press 2017 ISBN 978 1609807368 Chua Chen Lok Two Chinese Versions of the American Dream The Golden Mountain in Lin Yutang and Maxine Hong Kingston MELUS Vol 8 No 4 The Ethnic American Dream Winter 1981 pp 61 70 in JSTOR Churchwell Sarah Behold America The Entangled History of America First and the American Dream 2018 368 pp online review Cullen Jim The American dream a short history of an idea that shaped a nation Oxford University Press US 2004 ISBN 0195173252 Hanson Sandra L and John Zogby The Polls Trends Public Opinion Quarterly Sept 2010 Vol 74 Issue 3 pp 570 584 Hanson Sandra L and John Kenneth White ed The American Dream in the 21st Century Temple University Press 2011 168 pages essays by sociologists and other scholars how on the American Dream relates to politics religion race gender and generation Hopper Kenneth and William Hopper The Puritan Gift Reclaiming the American Dream Amidst Global Financial Chaos 2009 argues the Dream was devised by British entrepreneurs who build the American economy Johnson Heather Beth The American dream and the power of wealth choosing schools and inheriting inequality in the land of opportunity CRC Press 2006 ISBN 0415952395 Levinson Julie The American Success Myth on Film Palgrave Macmillan 2012 220 pages Lieu Nhi T The American Dream in Vietnamese U of Minnesota Press 2011 186 pages ISBN 978 0816665709 Ownby Ted American Dreams in Mississippi Consumers Poverty and Culture 1830 1998 University of North Carolina Press 1999 Samuel Lawrence R The American Dream A Cultural History Syracuse University Press 2012 241 pages identifies six distinct eras since the phrase was coined in 1931 External linksAmerican Dream at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata American culture at Curlie For a 1951 radio drama about the American Dream see Russell Thomas Story a presentation from Destination Freedom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title American Dream amp oldid 1203718522, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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