Examples Of Illusion In The Great Gatsby

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The Price of Perfecting an Illusion: Can an Illusion Last? At first glance, Jay Gatsby, in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, appears in total control, both of himself and his social circle. Brett Cohen’s illusion, in his viral video “Fake Celebrity Pranks New York City,” crumbles quickly and intentionally since Brett’s persona was only intended as a temporary illusion. Gatsby’s persona is unmaintainable when he surrounds himself with people like Wolfsheim, who would tear him down while attempting to build him up, even though it manages to endure for a short time. While Brett Cohen encourages his persona for only a limited amount of time, Gatsby attempts to maintain his persona constantly, suggesting that he intends to keep up his persona …show more content…

The lack of specificity allows Gatsby to become whoever others desire him to be; he can be anything to anyone, amplifying the traits of a social chameleon. Gatsby lacks the power to stop Wolfsheim from unraveling his persona, even as Wolfsheim attempts to solidify the persona for Nick. After Wolfsheim leaves, Gatsby is reluctant to disclose who the man actually is, skirting around the subject before bluntly revealing that he fixed the World Series. Nick feels strongly that Wolfsheim “play[ed] with the faith of fifty million people” (Fitzgerald Page 73). Nick believes that what Wolfsheim did was akin to betrayal on a massive scale, therefore Nick cannot trust what Wolfsheim has said. Wolfsheim’s actions are detrimental to Gatsby’s persona because his actions cause Nick to wonder if Gatsby, who holds Wolfsheim in such high regard, can be trusted. Gatsby replies that Wolfsheim “just saw the opportunity” (Fitzgerald Page 73). “Just” implies that something was a spontaneous action and is lacking in significance. It can also refer to something that has happened recently that people do not have control …show more content…

While directly meaning flawless, "perfect" can also be an idealized version of a real thing that can never remain. The second that Nick realizes that Gatsby has lost his flawlessness, his image, at least in Nick’s mind, falls apart. After Gatsby offers Nick a way to make some seemingly easy money, Nick realizes “now that under different circumstances that conversation might have been one of the crises of my life. But, because the offer was obviously and tactlessly for a service to be rendered, I had no choice except to cut him off there”. “But” is used to connect two contrasting ideas. In this case, it is the fact that at one point Nick may have struggled to decide what to do, but now his decision was clear. When Gatsby then says that Nick “wouldn’t have to do any business with Wolfsheim”, Nick believes that it was clear that Gatsby “thought that I was shying away from the “connection” mentioned at lunch” (Fitzgerald 83). Gonnegation, Wolfsheim’s way of saying connection, also means a link or an association with another

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