Material Gain In The Great Gatsby

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Material gain was the motivation for all, where people like Jay Gatsby wanted to be a part of the “new money” as well as respect from the East Egg in order to impress Daisy and, in reality, people like F. Scott Fitzgerald who had to gain money so Zelda would not leave him once more because of his lack of wealth. Gatsby’s and Fitzgerald’s life are very similar, both trying to reach the similar goal, however the result so different. Using his own life as well as what he wants he wants in life as a model for The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald defines the “American Dream” as solely material gain which would ultimately result in a fall, or as Fitzgerald calls it as a “crack up” period that Fitzgerald at the age of forty-nine, when he “had prematurely …show more content…

The American Dream of material gain is representative of this green light, where since it’s constantly lit, it reminds Gatsby of his goals constantly. Although Gatsby’s end goal is to win over Daisy from Tom Buchannan, he still seems distant as he mentions the green light to Daisy regardless of when she put her arm around him which indicates that he is more concentrated on even more gain even if Daisy, his ultimate goal, was right there beside him. This specific action of Gatsby can be regarded as a characteristic of many people during the 1920s, from when this book was written, of constantly wanting more and similarly in the 1920s, the constant lust for more led to the downfall of the economy, the Great Depression, where Gatsby as well loses everything as he forces Daisy to choose between Tom and himself. However, differing, Gatsby loses everything through death. This American Dream seems unreachable where it “seemed so close” that it “could hardly fail to grasp it” (Fitzgerald, 180). As majority of the population is part of either the middle class or the working class, similar to Gatsby being born to poverty, achieving the American Dream seems almost close to impossible, where people …show more content…

However, a minimal amount of people was able to reach the American Dream, similar to the green light that is constantly there, but constantly out of reach. In The Great Gatsby, “The Land of Opportunity promised the chance for financial success” (Preface), where Gatsby believes that he can buy anything with money, which he later learns as he is unable to buy Daisy with his money. When Gatsby’s “heart beat faster and faster as Daisy’s white face came up to his own” (Fitzgerald, 110), it is fair to assume that Gatsby’s ultimate goal is Daisy, where eventually Daisy would not be able to meet Gatsby’s plans with her by staying with Tom who already had a stable economic status unlike Gatsby’s new money. In The Great Gatsby, Gatsby, himself, would be the best representative of the ability to reach the American Dream, where he initially grew up as a son of farmers and would sequentially achieve a large wealth, which we would sooner learn that he acquired that wealth through mysterious criminal activities that we can assume as a bootlegger during the time of national prohibition (Preface). Fitzgerald, similarly to Gatsby, was given birth by a failed manufacturer and as he fell in love with Zelda,

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