Examples Of Fallacy In The Great Gatsby

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Yahya Mir Laborde A AP English 1 April 4, 2024. The Fallacy of the Upper Class Many people believe that money is the solution to any problem. So, having a surplus amount of it should deal with all problems and obstacles. In the case of The Great Gatsby, “careless people, Tom and Daisy—they smashed up things and. . . then retreated back into their money. . . and let other people clean up the mess they had made.” (Fitzgerald 179). They live without consequences due to their affluence and societal group being the upper class. They always have someone else to fix their messes and problems. Also, in the Age of Innocence, during Newland’s lavish wedding, they had “a stormy discussion as to whether the wedding presents should be “shown”... it seemed …show more content…

Most of this unhappiness stems from the demand to marry partners of equal or more incredible wealth. An example of societal standards causing misery would be in the case of Ellen Olenska and her husband, who is even richer than she is but is constantly cheating on her with different women and stealing her money. Sillerton Jackson identifies the duality of this standard, saying she is “sick of the hypocrisy that would bury alive a woman of her age if her husband prefers to live with harlots.”(Wharton 27). In Ellen's case, she says that the societal standard is to live with your husband no matter what, even if he is cheating on you and stealing your fortune. Due to this standard of upper-class marriage, Ellen is forced to be miserable with her deceitful husband, no matter what pain he inflicts on her. Also, Daisy's relentless pursuit of marrying into wealth often leads to misery and fosters unhappy relationships, as seen in The Great Gatsby. This is evident in Jordan's account of Daisy on her wedding night with Tom as Daisy tells her maid to “Take ’em[pearls given by Tom] downstairs and give ’em back to whoever they belong to. Tell ’em all Daisy’s changed’ her mine. Say: ‘Daisy’s changed’ her mine!’(Fitzgerald 76). She is reluctant to marry Tom because she never really loved him but loved Gatsby. However, due to Gatsby’s social status and his lower class, she was unable to marry him because it would remove her from the upper class. Her inability to marry Gatsby forces her to marry Tom, who is even more wealthy than she is and is miles richer than Gatsby. This societal standard of marrying richer causes Daisy to become miserable because she is coerced into marrying Tom, a man she never truly loved. Another example would be in The Great Gatsby but with Myrtle. Myrtle is determined to marry equally wealthy or stay

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