ABSTRACT

What do we mean by the American dream? Can we define it? Or does any discussion of the phrase end inconclusively, the solid turned liquid—like ice melting? Do we know whether the American dream motivates and inspires or, alternately, obscures and deceives? The Routledge Handbook on the American Dream offers distinctive, authoritative, original essays by well-known scholars that address the social, economic, historical, philosophic, legal, and cultural dimensions of the American dream for the twenty-first century. The American dream, first discussed and defined in print by James Truslow Adams’s The Epic of America (1931), has become nearly synonymous with being American. Adams’s definition, although known to scholars, is often lost in our ubiquitous use of the term. When used today, the iconic phrase seems to encapsulate every fashion, fad, trend, association, or image the user identifies with the United States or American life. The American dream’s ubiquity, though, argues eloquently for a deeper understanding of its heritage, its implications, and its impact—to be found in this first research handbook ever published on the topic.

chapter 1|26 pages

Introduction

What Is the American Dream?

part I|94 pages

Economic Success, Upward Economic Mobility and the American Dream

part II|25 pages

Contemporary Issues in American Dream Studies

chapter 8|10 pages

The Random Factor

Chance, Luck, and the American Dream

chapter 9|13 pages

The Feminist American Dream

part III|40 pages

Migration and the Immigrant American Dream

part IV|52 pages

Marginalized Americans and the American Dream

part V|36 pages

The American Dream Goes Global?

part VI|12 pages

Sustainability and the American Dream