Examples Of Lost Generation In The Great Gatsby

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1920’s Post World War I Long Island, New York is where F. Scott Fitzgerald chooses to set his novel, The Great Gatsby. A majority of character in Fitzgerald’s novel are seen to be a part of the Lost Generation. The Lost Generation is known as an individual's loss of identity, lack of family support, disappearance of moral values, etc. Being a part of the Lost Generation was people’s way of getting their lives back together or searching for something that they feel like they are missing now that the war is over. Fitzgerald uses his character’s immoral behaviors to show how individuals of the Lost Generation are trying to fill the void that they have after World War I. The character’s loss of morals are a result of their carelessness and …show more content…

Women are using these ideas to fill the void that they faced during the that the men were serving during World War I. Some women of this time period are seen being unfaithful to their marriages. Fitzgerald’s character Myrtle is a prime example of a woman being unfaithful to her marriage. Myrtle’s husband is “so dumb he doesn't know he’s alive” (Fitzgerald 26). Myrtle is having an affair with Tom and her husband, George does not even know about it. George thinks that his wife is going to New York to visit her sister. He is oblivious as to what is actually happening when Myrtle goes into the city. Some women can be seen having secret love affairs with men just to get their money. Alden Mudge writes in his article, The house that dreams built, about how the women characters are portrayed in the Great Gatsby. Mudge states that he believes that women are not seen “as anything other than materialists” (Mudge). Myrtle Wilson can be considered to be a stereotype and materialistic individual like some of the women of the 1920’s. She only wants to be with Tom for his money and for the material things that he gives to her. Myrtle does not care that she is being unfaithful to the man she married, all she cares about is the fact that Tom is person of old money and can buy her expensive things. Women's views on faithfulness and money are flawed …show more content…

Drinking often and throwing overindulgent parties expresses the influence that the Lost Generation had on the public. In Fitzgerald’s novel, Nick is seen drinking with Tom and Myrtle while in the city. The three characters are drinking and having a good time with some of Tom and Myrtle’s neighbors in their shared apartment. Having consumed a large amount of alcohol, Nick is having a grand time and then, “... I was standing beside his bed and he was sitting up between the sheets clad in his underwear” (Fitzgerald 38). Fitzgerald uses an ellipsis to show an advance in time; from after Nick has started drinking until he wakes up the next morning. The information that Nick leaves out is a result of him blacking out because of the amount of alcohol that he has had. The overindulgent parties thrown during this period of time are another result of the population being a part of the Lost Generation. In the article, All men are [not] created equal, Claire Stocks writes about Gatsby’s wealth and how it contributes to the parties that he throws. Stocks voices her opinion that Gatsby’s home and his parties “act out the role of the millionaire as he shows off his wealth” (Stocks). Gatsby abuses his wealth and his power in order to throw these over the top parties whenever he wants to. He shows off his wealth by throwing extravagant parties with millions of people in attendance.

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