How Is Jay Gatsby Perfect

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In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the main character, Jay Gatsby, falls in love with a deceptive reality that he has created in his mind. Gatsby has become someone that he isn’t, he has built himself up on lies and dirty money, although he glorifies his wealth and wants to show himself off so his romantic interest, Daisy, notices him. He tends to lie to himself about who Daisy is and who he really is. Gatsby has a huge ego that needs to be fulfilled. He builds a better, more perfect image of himself to get the attention of Daisy, a girl that he had romantic relations with five years ago. He saw her as the ideal woman, with high status, old money, a charming personality, and ultimately he wanted her because he knew that she was unattainable. …show more content…

He had previously decided that she was the only person for him. Just as Gatsby fabricates his identity, he creates an ideal version of Daisy. He had fallen in love with a version of her that existed in his imagination. This Daisy is pure, perfect, and eternally connected to the happiest moments of her life. He then decides that he would become perfect in every way, so Daisy notices him and falls in love with his passionate ways. Gatsby moves to a house across the way from hers, close enough that he can see her green docklight. He fixates on this docklight throughout the book. "Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us (Fitzgerald pg. 138).". This quote shows Gatsby's relentless pursuit of his dreams, especially his pursuit of Daisy and the romanticized future he imagines with her, his dreams that have been just out of reach-much like the light. He has built himself into wealth, he did not come from money, he became popular and mysterious, and throws raving parties just so, maybe one day Daisy will curiously peek into one and chat with Gatsby. He even remembers her voice as, “The kind of voice the ear follows up and down, as if each speech is an arrangement of notes that will never be played again (Fitzgerald pg. 10).” Gatsby treasures everything about her, he thinks she is a perfect woman, but in reality, he only ever saw her when she had no responsibilities. He …show more content…

His name is not even Jay Gatsby, it is James Gatz. He decided to change it when he moved to East Egg because he wanted to fit in and lead others to assume he came from a wealthy family, not from a humble farmer background. Gatsby wants to recreate the past and go back to happier times with Daisy, when she was in his life, he was happy and fulfilled. Gatsby is living life in delusion, he believes that he can repeat the past. He even argues with Nick, "Can't repeat the past?...Why? Of course you can! Fitzgerald pg. 78. 85)." Daisy is a prize, a key to regaining that comfort and enjoyment in life. Gatsby earned his money unethically, although he has justified it as just another vital step in the process of winning Daisy back. When Gatsby eventually gets rejected by Daisy, his whole purpose disappears. There is no reason for him to have engaged in criminal behavior, no reason to have moved and changed his name, and no reason to have devoted his life to a person that does not share the same fascination that he does. Thus making Gatsby insecure about his life and the pathway he has taken. Gatsby never stopped trying to get Daisy back, he even says that he’s “going to fix everything just the way it was before”. Daisy will see Fitzgerald pg.

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