How Does Daisy Use Hope In The Great Gatsby

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People see hope in very different ways. They see it as a way of living, as a light at the end of a long tunnel, as a reward for all the hardships and hills. But what they don’t realize is that they see hope in a very optimistic way, not in a realistic way. There’s a term for this: false hope. False hope translates into disillusionment. The idea that people see hope, and instead of embracing its intangible nature, they make a living around it. Is disillusionment and hope a way of living idealistically, or are they inevitable and wasteful ways of dying? The themes of hope and disillusion are present in both A Farewell To Arms and the Great Gatsby through Frederic Henry’s relationship with Jay Gatsby, but F. Scott Fitzgerald did a much better …show more content…

Though the story of Henry and Catherine may be more realistic, the relationship that Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby had in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel was by far easier to attach, relate, and understand. In comparison to only Henry’s involvement in the theme, Gatsby and Daisy both show elements of hope and disillusionment, making the theme a lot more presentable. An article titled F. Scott Fitzgerald's Gatsby and the Imagination of Wonder, the author Giles Gunn states, “What is at issue, of course, is not the survival of Gatsby himself nor even the substance of his vision; the one is fatally vulnerable, the other hopelessly naive and corruptible” (Gunn 172). In the article by Gunn he touches on the differences between Gatsby and Daisy, which can also really help develop their involvement in the themes of hope and disillusionment. He references Daisy as being both naive and corrupt. Daisy was hopeful of having something, anything with Gatsby, but she was inevitably tied to Tom and could not stand to make a decision for herself. Whether she knew Tom would reject it or some other circumstance, any idea of hope she had quickly faded and she basically blocked it out of her

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