Role Of Dreamers In The Great Gatsby

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What is F. Scott Fitzgerald saying about “dreamers?” The Great Gatsby is the story of the “American Dream.” It is a testament to the idea that the American Dream doesn't exist. The characters represent an unfulfilled aspect of the ‘American Dream’. Fitzgerald uses Nick’s narrative to demonstrate the way we should feel about the ‘American Dream’ by the end of the book. He does this by creating characters that represent what everyone sees to be the end of the road in that dream, but makes it so that these people are unhappy. Fitzgerald uses Nick as the eyes of the audience to show Fitzgerald’s initial expectations of the way that this dream manifests itself in reality. When Nick first meets Tom and Daisy at their house he talk about how he admires it. In the book houses have represented the manifestation of vast wealth. You can see the contrast between Gatsby’s giant house and Nick’s small cottage as a tool that Fitzgerald uses to contrast between their economic status. He says, “Their house was even more elaborate than I expected, a cheerful red and white Georgian Colonial mansion, overlooking the bay.” (Pg 6) This shows his prior belief that this example of the American Dream would be admirable. Furthermore, his job as a bond salesmen is following the economic boom of the Roaring Twenties. He aspires to have …show more content…

An example of this is when he is talking to daisy and she says that “‘that's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool’ (...) I felt the basic insincerity of what she had said. It made me uneasy.” He begins to realize how empty the wealthy New Yorkers really are. Later he realizes that perhaps Gatsby isn't who he says he is when saying. “But young men didn’t (...) drift coolly out of nowhere and buy a place on long island sound.” He sees now that maybe there might have been more to Gatsby than a rich man from a rich family who went to

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