Faces Of The Diamond - Essay O
n The Diamond as big as the Ritz
�Diamond � was designed utterly for my own amusement. I was in a mood characterized by a perfect craving for luxury, and the story began as an attempt to feed that craving on imaginary foods.� Craving is a strong, urgent and persistent desire. According to Buddhist teachings, desire is the root to all the sufferings and injustices in the world. If it were the goal of mankind to abandon their desires for excessive needs, the world would be a peaceful and harmonious place. Throughout history, there had also been great prophets such as Isaiah and other outstanding preachers who made daring attempts to convert and lead mankind back to the Lord, our God. ...
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the Ritz� to ridicule the American society on the terms of the corruption of the American dream, the maltreatment of human life and the limits to the power of wealth.
Before the dawning of the Jazz Age, the American dream stood for hard work, honesty, virtue, and morality, as any individual of the society is able to achieve success and rise to a higher level of material living regardless of one�s origin. As time proceeded, Americans began to strive for their goal through underhanded tactics thus corrupting the main principles of the utopian dream. Hence, the American dream has now become a satirical term that is known for crime, deceit, stealing, and killing. �The Diamond as Big as the Ritz� features Braddock Tarleton Washington, the richest man on Earth, as one who rises to ultimate power without having to work for it. Born a direct descendent of George Washington, Braddock only takes care to protect his prized possession, the world�s biggest diamond rivaling in size with the ...
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eliminating the rights of the enslaved. Fitz-Norman Culpepper Washington, Braddock�s father, read his slaves a proclamation that he had composed which announced that the shattered Southern armies were reorganized from the remains of the Civil War and they defeated the North in a one pitched battle, his slaves believed him implicitly. Through this satirical event, Fitzgerald expresses his idea to the readers that many forms of slavery still exist today. After all, it is human�s innate desire to covet material goods and power. Slavery may also exist in other forms besides the possession of human individuals. For example, all of those who crave for luxury are slaves to materials and ...
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"Faces Of The Diamond - Essay O." Essayworld.com. October 28, 2007. Accessed November 28, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Faces-Of-The-Diamond-Essay-O/73467.
"Faces Of The Diamond - Essay O." Essayworld.com. October 28, 2007. Accessed November 28, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Faces-Of-The-Diamond-Essay-O/73467.
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