Emotional Bankruptcy In The Great Gatsby

1356 Words3 Pages

t is believed that this metaphor stems from his own troubles in finance during the creation of many works. (pardis 82) Another example of this themes was Josephine from “Josaphines stories”. It is shown through this work that “emotional bankruptcy” was inevitable for women of Fitzgerafitzgerald 'sld 's time, because they were treated as sexual objects. In the story, Josephine’s “emotional bankruptcy” is expressed that she is not only a consumer, but also an object of consumerism. This was very common of women of the luxury class in her time. But the most significant character that this theme is demonstrated through though is Dick Diver from “tender is the night”. In this novel, we see Diver go from a caring and brilliant psychiatrist to a someone that could no longer feel, and was living a numb life. This was because he gave …show more content…

While Gatsby is crossing over the bridge, he sees a limo, with black people in it, and he calls them “modish” and even calls them “bucks”. Later on in the story he gives a horrible physical image of a jew, calling him “flat nosed and large headed.” But Fitzgerald could have merely have been just exposing the racism and anti-semitism that was very prevalent in the US at the time, as further evidence, his works were published in the most popular magazines, even with these distance themes. The african american characters are seen to be mainly just servants in houses of the rich, even making so that they had speech impediments, and Fitzgerald was heavily criticized for this. The references to jews are less in number, but no less rude. In “May Day," a jew is described as “gesticulating, little, and with long black whiskers”. In these stereotypes we can see Fitzgerald 's use of adjectives to give the reader a very real image in their heads. While many of the stereotypes that Fitzgerald wrote were horrible, he was merely writing what many people of that time period were

Open Document