Motherhood in the Life of James Gatz: Based on F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby

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The Greaty Gatsby is not only Fitzgerald's best work, but it is one of the greatest pieces of literature to ever have been published in the United States. This all time classic offers an accurate depiction of the Roaring Twenties, as it exposes the decadence and loss of morality hidden beneath the luxury of the times. Popular interpretations present the novel as a critical review of class issues and the social situation existent in the 1920s, as well as Fitzgerald's commentary on the American Dream. The author's own biography is often referred to in an attempt to fully grasp the underlying meaning of the novel. However, switching one's attention from the historical context to something more elementary, such as the psychology and life of Jay Gatsby himself, may be rather insightful. Perhaps, the aspects that draw the reader's attention the least are the ones that are most significant. Reading The Great Gatsby through the perspective of his relationship to women, his mother and Daisy in particular, can shed new light on his behaviour. Within Gatsby's wonderful mansion, beneath the expensive clothing, lives a motherless child. His passionate love of Daisy is not strictly a result of her beauty and social class. It has a far more profound meaning. Gatsby's mother was not the only maternal figure he had. Daisy played the same role in Jay's life, from the moment they first kissed, to the moment he died.
"I am the son of some wealthy people in the middle-west – all dead now," Gatsby tells Nick (Fitzgerald, 1968). Although, it later becomes apparent that this statement was a lie, the character is expressing his sincere "desire to psychologically kill [his] parents" (Tyson, 2006). This coincides with a refusal to accept their existence a...

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...tatus and she is an excellent model on which he can relive his feelings of not being good enough.
When a 17 year old James Gatz left his childhood home, he was hoping that by leaving behind his mother and father, the source of his humiliation, he could run away from all the troubles that caused such long lasting marks on his psyche. Jay Gatsby's association of women with shame had become a permanent part of his outlook on life. Daisy's character emphasizes the true origins and social status of her lover. She may seem like everything his mother wasn't, but they both play the same sad role in his life. Although he refused to abandon the thought of being with Daisy, the way he had abandoned his mother, he never ceased in being the guilty child; the boy who wished to be something more for his mother. They are the women he tried to be better for, but simply couldn't.

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