Norman Rockwell's World... An American Dream was created in 1972.
The duration of Norman Rockwell's World... An American Dream is 1500.0 seconds.
Norman Rockwell's World...An American Dream won the Oscar for Short Film - Live Action - in 1972.
for world war two to end
When an American person has a dream, it is called an American Dream!
The Declaration of Independence expresses the American dream. It talks about freedom, and the ability of a man, or a country, to make his own way in the world. That is the basis of the quintessential American Dream.
The American Dream.
Owning the home and a car in the garage
Norman Burton Norman Burton
Emily Dickinson's idea of the American dream is often seen as centered on self-reliance, individualism, and the pursuit of personal growth and fulfillment. Dickinson's poetry often explores themes of nature, spirituality, and the inner world of the individual, reflecting a more introspective and contemplative interpretation of the American dream.
For many Americans in the years after World War 2 the American Dream revolved around home ownership. People wanted a nice home and nice things, since the country was more prosperous.
The American dream is very important. The American dream is to have fair rules and to have freedom. Our dream is too try to make children live an easier and fairer life. The American dream is to let people have their rights. The American dream is also used to help children have a bigger and brighter education. The American dream is for people to have freedom and to ease life. It is for people to stop being slaves. It is to have no more rulers. The American dream is also to stop having kings and for them to stop being lazy and have other people do things for them, and for the ruler to treat everyone fairly. The American dream gives people their rights. It lets everybody live in peace without those really harsh times. It gives people options and let's people express their selves.The American dream is for children to live a better life then our parents did. It is for everybody to have the chance to be intelligent. It is for schools to treat students better in the future.These are some of the idealistic values of the American dream- it's up to you to decide haw these idealistic values are associated with the materialistic- that is; are all of these ideas being put to use today, or are they illusory? Is the american dream just that- a dream?