Examples Of Narcissism In The Great Gatsby

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By inventing Jay Gatsby as a larger than life socialite with an absurd capacity to dream, F. Scott Fitzgerald paints him as a character with unsizeable greatness in The Great Gatsby. Through shady bootlegging practices, Gatsby offers up his reputation in the name of wealth. His undying love for Daisy and passion to prove himself are the main motives behind his epic economic success, even though Mrs. Buchanan is “fickle in love” (Li 53). Gatz's relentless efforts reveal his great commitment to winning her heart. Unfortunately, though, Gatsby’s inability to “break faith with his ego-ideal” and realize that he desires too much leads to his demise (Lathbury 10). In addition, Nick Carraway is often understood as a “morally obtuse” narrator whose …show more content…

Though his aspirations and motive behind the scenes were high, Gatsby’s zeal in realizing the attainability of his dreams makes quite a dunce of him. Gatsby often displays the qualities of the typical foolish narcissist, as his ego-ideal becomes “inflated and destructive because it is filled with images of ‘perfection and omnipotence’” (Lathbury 92). Gatsby wants the perfect life, and believes that any amount of worldly power can allow him to control the course of the past. Gatsby’s mind is forever “trapped in a timeless past which allows him no chance to develop any understanding of life’s complexity” (Parkinson 108). His pathological attitude leaves him hopeless until the end of his life. Nick Carraway, the narrator, also carries some amount of fault for his depiction of Gatsby, especially in early scenes of the novel. Nick sees Gatsby in a severely ambiguous and conflicted vision, where one perspective “puts him into romantic and heroic glow, while the other rejects him as ‘simply a proprietor of an elaborate road-house next door’” (101). Nick struggles to harmonize these two interpretations, wavering as he looks to discover the truth behind Gatsby’s mystifying

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