THE HORATIO ALGER MYTH By: Steven Serna, Christopher Lawrence, Jesse Chuquitaipe, Miguel Gomez, Ian Chochrek, and Riley Murphy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Do you agree or disagree with the quotation above
Advertisements

The Great Gatsby: Finish
“Icarus”: The poet is telling us that not ever striving for greatness is a greater tragedy than trying and failing. The allusion to the Greek myth of Icarus.
The Great Gatsby Review Game
The Great Gatsby Seminar By: AJ Bossio & Josh Martenstyn.
The story of Governmentville. Be prepared to write notes and pay attention. Believe it or not, the story has a point!
Of Mice and Men SSR Presentation
Jaida, Alyssa, Drew, Darius
Ap Literature 8/20.
Elements of a Novel. Elements of Novel Setting The time and location in which a story takes place is called the setting There are several aspects of a.
Critical Essay.  Choose a novel or short story in which the fate of the main character is important in conveying the writer’s theme.  Explain what you.
Writing a Thesis Statement
Writing a Literary Analysis. Character Analysis (for example, but this would apply to whatever you’ve chosen to analyze) While reading a story, choose.
Thesis Statements (Or as I like to say, “What’s your point?”)
Death of a Salesman & The Great Gatsby Good vs. Bad Thesis & How to Connect Examples to Thesis.
Unit 5 Social Class Essential Questions: What is social class?
Literary Analysis The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Great Gatsby Project
Color Symbolism: 1) Gray is the color for dreariness
Historical and bibliographical approach to Literature
The Art of Annotating The Pathway to Analytical Reading.
Grade 7 Source Analysis The Fight!. Are all primary sources reliable? What are the good points and bad points of primary sources. What is bias– could.
Gatsby Bellringer # Define what you think is the “stereotypical” American Dream. 2. Where do you think this idea of the American Dream comes.
The Great Gatsby: Green By Matthew Norman, Whitney Stubbs, and Kelsie Watson.
The Golden Circle, Dating and Building a Cathedral
GREEN GIA PERRY, HAYLEY LAMBERTSEN, MYLES COLLINS.
Prompt #1: The American Dream
 A topic is not a thesis.  I assign a topic; you develop a thesis from it.  The topic is designed to be general, to allow each student to develop his.
Death of a Salesman Body Paragraphs. Overview  Between your introduction and conclusion should be three paragraphs that support and prove your thesis.
{ The Great Gatsby A closer look at chapter one….
Thematic Notebook Questions
The Art of Annotating The Pathway to Analytical Reading.
The Great Gatsby Bellringer #1 4/8/13 1.Explain what you think the stereotypical “American Dream” is. Give examples in your definition. 2. Predict: Given.
The Great Gatsby/Death of a Salesman Analysis:
Tuesday, March 8, 2011 Good morning, English 11!
Literary Response.
Thesis Statements (Or as I like to say, “What’s your point?”)
Hero By: Mike Lupica The Penguin Group Copyright: 2010 Report By: Jacob Burnham.
The Great Gatsby Review Game Character s Chap 1-4Chap 5-9ThemeSymbols1920’s history BONUS.
Synthesis Essay: Thesis Statements Benchmark
Herman Melville Biography Born in NYC on August 1, 1819 to a somewhat poor family and had a father that was a “slow” man. He was one of eight.
Color Symbol Mini Project Myla Harris. Green Quotes  Quote #1:  “If it wasn’t for the mist we could see your home across the bay,” said Gatsby. “You.
11H Concession and Refutation. Goal: to compose body paragraphs RIGHT NOW: Sign up for a Small Group Mini Lesson if you think you need it. Look through.
Chapter 4 Lesson 3 – Social Darwinism and Social Reform
Chapters 8 and 9 Discussion
The Great Gatsby. Chapter One Summarize what happened in the chapter. Help each other clarify. Ask questions if you’re confused.
Flipped By Wendelin Van Draaden. Setting The story takes place in a modern day suburban neighborhood.
Birth of Rock and Roll – Day 7 Goals: Students will Know: How authors Horatio Alger, Jr. and John Steinbeck interpreted the American Dream through their.
HORATIO ALGER MYTH. BACKGROUND INFORMATION.GREW UP IN A POOR ENVIRONMENT.WAS BORN ON FRIDAY, JANUARY 13,1832.WAS AN AUTHOR DURING THE CIVIL WAR BECAME.
Chapter 4 The Great Gatsby. The place to be “…who accepted Gatsby’s hospitality and paid him the subtle tribute of knowing nothing whatever about him”
Of The Great Gatsby. The Narrator Sees Everything… Nick Carraway, the narrator of The Great Gatsby, experiences all events that occur in the novel from.
THE ROARING TWENTIES And it’s connection to “The Great Gatsby”
MUST DO: In your notebook, respond to this question, “What does the rise of the Dystopian novel say about what is going on in the world at the time?”
“The Great Gatsby” Expository Essay. The American Dream a) What is Fitzgerald’s portrayal of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby? What are its attractions.
Iceberg Theory List two pieces of information that we know even though Nick does not directly tell us. Give text that supports your inference. How do we.
TOP 3  #23  #7  #12. ORGANIZING YOUR INTRO The guide for your whole paper.
Horatio ALGER Ragged Dick Horatio ALGER (1834–99), American writer of boys' stories, born in Mass. Wrote over 100 books for boys, the first, Ragged Dick.
The Great Gatsby Unit Plan Focusing on The American Dream.
The American Dream: The Great Gatsby
Horatio Alger: “Ragged Dick”
The Great Gatsby Bellringer #1 4/8/13
Chapter 4 Lesson 3 – Social Darwinism and Social Reform
Gatsby Revision Session.
An Introduction to the Idea and its Development
The Great Gatsby Revision.
and some other characters...
Session 15: Writing across texts
A Look Back at F. Scott Fitzgerald, Gatsby, & the 1920s
The American Dream Portrayed Through the Setting and Characters
“The Great Gatsby” F. Scott Fitzgerald
Presentation transcript:

THE HORATIO ALGER MYTH By: Steven Serna, Christopher Lawrence, Jesse Chuquitaipe, Miguel Gomez, Ian Chochrek, and Riley Murphy

"HORATIO ALGER MYTH" In the article "The Horatio Alger Myth" by Ralph D. Garner, the author write a biography on Horatio Alger. Many of his stories were rags to riches stories that inspired many low class children around the United States. Some examples that were portrayed in this article were the Luck & Pluck Books and the Ragged Dick Series. They all relate to the American Dream. They all relate to the American Dream because the stories are about poor people who work hard throughout their stories and in the end the characters become successful in terms of wealth.

CENTRAL CLAIM The author is saying that the idea of achieving the American Dream through hard work is a myth. A myth is a widely held but false belief or idea. So many people thought that they could improve their social class by working hard, but in reality they couldn’t. Therefore, achieving the American Dream is a myth. The purpose of Horatio Alger's books was to inspire kids around the United States and pushed them to an improved future.

EVIDENCE AND EXPLANATION 1 “He was, without doubt, America's all-time best-selling author! But there are critics who protest that Horatio Alger was an overrated fraud. He misled kids, they claim, probably causing many who stood up to the neighborhood bully to wind up with a bloody nose,” (Gardner 62). Horatio Alger was a popular author in America. That means a lot of people were reading his books. However, he wasn't that great because of his short stories that misled kids into thinking that they could improve their social rank but they couldn't. The evidence shows that kids were motivated to take down the bully that ended up getting beaten up in the end. It shows how the American Dream can be misleading because many people think they can upgrade their social rank by trying their hardest but they end up not succeeding.

EVIDENCE AND EXPLANATION 2 “Horatio Alger’s literary quality, modern critics complain, was meager to say the least. The Alger Hero often was cloyingly virtuous, his rise from rags to riches too often based upon incredible luck. … it is reasonable to suggest that millions who were enchanted by his stories gone by would disagree,” (Gardner 65). Horatio's literary quality was meager. What it means to be meager is that his works lack quality. The Alger Hero was cloyingly virtuous and these characters that became rich in these rags to riches stories were too lucky. This is saying that it is very unlikely to go from the lower class to the upper class and you would need to be very lucky to achieve that rank. However, people disagreed with this and those people don't realize that the American Dream they wanted to reach wasn't realistic. People would keep trying to place higher in social rank because they believed that the stories are applied to real life and they thought they could do it to. Just because it seems possible to do in a story doesn't mean it's attainable in the real world by everyone.

EVIDENCE AND EXPLANATION 3 “Few will disagree that Horatio was a novelist of tremendous influence. For youngsters on farms and in teeming cities he provided repeatedly acknowledged incentives to struggle upward. His stories magic effect upon many was their own resolve that ‘if Ragged Dick could do it, so can I!” (Gardner 66). Many people agreed that Horatio was a huge influence in America because of his reputation as a popular author. His stories is what got poor people into believing and having confidence in themselves to live the American Dream. His books had a way of connecting the reader with the characters in the book and that is what touched them and made them realize what their role was which was to move up in rank. However, people would struggle upward but not get anywhere really to achieve the American Dream. This is because people at that time believed that rags to riches stories are true stories and that they could achieve the American Dream just like Ragged Dick; yet they don't realize that these are just stories, so it isn't true and it isn't realistic for this to happen to people.

CONNECTION TO THE GREAT GATSBY The central claim connects to the Great Gatsby because in the novel “The Great Gatsby” there is a symbol that represents the American Dream. It is the green light. The green light in the novel was Gatsby’s inspiration and his aspiration. His dream was to be with Daisy again. Gatsby worked hard to become wealthy and thought that he would be able to attract Daisy to be with him. However his dream already died. “He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him, somewhere back in that vast obscurity beyond the city, where the dark fields of the republic rolled on under the night,” (Fitzgerald 180).