Jealousy In Gatsby

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A Study of Nick’s Jealousy: The Tour Scene
Can Jealousy result from one’s own unhappiness? In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, published in 1925, readers are immersed into a complex novel narrated in first person by Nick Carraway. Nick lives in West Egg, next to a luxurious mansion inhabited by a mysterious man named Jay Gatsby. Nick is fascinated by Gatsby, and is overjoyed when he is invited to one of his extravagant parties. Over time, Gatsby and Nick get to know each other and Gatsby feels comfortable enough to ask a favor of Nick. Gatsby met Nick’s cousin, Daisy, during the war and has been passionately in love with her ever since. Gatsby inquires about an arrangement for a reunion with Daisy, and Nick accepts to serve as the host. After they connect over tea, Gatsby brings Daisy to his mansion to show off his property during a tour. When the two meet, there is a constant theme present; Gatsby tries to impress Daisy with his wealth to win her love. Our narrator, Nick, playfully criticizes Gatsby’s ability to impress Daisy with such ease, using the technique of sarcasm, because he is jealous of a “perfect” life that he himself does not live.
Nick’s ever-present jealousy is introduced during the first chapter of the novel. Nick describes the location of his home in order to allow himself a way to denounce his neighbor’s, because he is jealous of their luxurious homes. Nick begins the novel by saying that he “lived at West Egg, the—well, the least fashionable of the two” (5). Nick prefers the “East Egg” status, showing that the location of his house is obviously very important to him. Nick has a hard time affording the cost of West Egg land, even though he denounces it as less “fashionable”. Nick chooses t...

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...’s perfect and carefree lifestyle. Although Nick tries to cover up with his frustration with criticism for his house, he is ultimately jealous of Daisy and Gatsby’s relationship. Readers must ponder: is Gatsby’s lifestyle really so “perfect”? At the end of the novel, Gatsby’s ultimate death is certainly not “perfect”. Gatsby ultimately dies due to his excessive cheating and lying. His death is a type of payback for his actions. This is something that Nick should not be jealous of. If Nick were not such a shallow character, focusing on Gatsby all the time, he could spend more time focusing on himself and he would end up having a happier life. In the end, Nick moves to the Midwest to seek a fresh start for his life, and terminates his relationship with Jordan. Nick’s ultimate jealousy forces him to rethink his life’s objectives and start a new beginning.

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