Unclaimed Promises: The Erosion of the American Dream from Hope to Entitlement Audiobook By Signal Fire Press cover art

Unclaimed Promises: The Erosion of the American Dream from Hope to Entitlement

How the American Dream Was Repackaged, Sold Off, and Replaced by Debt, Hustle Culture, and Manufactured Despair

Virtual Voice Sample

$0.00 for first 30 days

Try for $0.00
Access a growing selection of included Audible Originals, audiobooks, and podcasts.
You will get an email reminder before your trial ends.
Audible Plus auto-renews for $7.95/mo after 30 days. Upgrade or cancel anytime.

Unclaimed Promises: The Erosion of the American Dream from Hope to Entitlement

By: Signal Fire Press
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
Try for $0.00

$7.95 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $5.99

Buy for $5.99

Confirm purchase
Pay using card ending in
By confirming your purchase, you agree to Audible's Conditions of Use, License, and Amazon's Privacy Notice. Taxes where applicable.
Cancel
Background images

This title uses virtual voice narration

Virtual voice is computer-generated narration for audiobooks.

What happens when the promise of upward mobility becomes a trap?
In Unclaimed Promises, a sharp and unflinching analysis of America’s most enduring myth, this book traces the slow erosion of the American Dream—from its Enlightenment-era origins to its current form as a hollow performance of success backed by debt, burnout, and disillusionment.

Through thirty tightly structured chapters, the author dismantles the illusion that hard work leads to security. From Jefferson’s contradictions and industrial labor exploitation to Reaganomics, student debt, and the gig economy, each chapter exposes the machinery behind a dream that was always more selective than inclusive. This is not a nostalgic lament—it’s a forensic audit. One that uncovers how the Dream became less a shared ideal and more a branded hustle.

Drawing on history, economics, and cultural critique, Unclaimed Promises shows how the narrative of meritocracy was manufactured, how surveillance capitalism turned aspiration into data, and how entire generations were labeled “entitled” for noticing the rigged terms of engagement.

This book is for readers tired of motivational fluff. It doesn’t ask you to dream bigger—it asks why the Dream was constructed this way at all. If you’ve ever questioned why working harder no longer works, why homeownership feels like a mirage, or why burnout is now a default setting, this is your answer.

Unclaimed Promises doesn’t mourn the Dream. It interrogates it—and dares to imagine what comes next.

Americas Economic Conditions Economic History Economics United States
No reviews yet