There seems to be no formula to explain the reasons behind a young, hopeful, poor, farm-boy elected and destined for greatness. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby “sprang from his Platonic conception of himself” (Fitzgerald 98), designating himself as the direct son of G-d, and supposedly inheriting all the greatness that accompanies such a role. But due to Gatsby’s tenacity and sensitivity to the possibilities of life, he is able to actualize the greatness contrived in his Platonic conception of himself in a special way and utilize this self-imposed power as if he truly had inherited it from G-d. With this, Gatsby finds success on a short-term scale by sustaining a front in order to become esteemed for his greatness among the public rather than on a long-term scale by carefully putting his talent to use to find the right path to ultimate success. His approach is one of always trying to prove the legitimacy of his seemingly artificial election to the world, even when he knows it is real. In the play “Proof,” by David Auburn, following the loss of her father, rather than temporarily satisfying herself by short-term methods, Catherine endures her struggle to manage her own inherited greatness and mental illness, consequentially discovering her talent and writing a proof until she finds a confidant, Hal, who is able to guide her on her journey for success. In the first scene of “Proof,” the audience sees that Robert not only passes along his mathematical ability to Catherine but also passes along his trust in her, opening the path for her to turn the mathematical ability into greatness. While Catherine admits that her education was “living in this house for twenty-five years” (Auburn 64), Robert knows that Cather... ... middle of paper ... ...n his potential for greatness, after he loses Daisy the first time, he does not remain true to its message, approaching it by putting forward a front for the purposes of convincing the world of his greatness rather than finding the best path, he only is willing to achieve what has already been lost, veering him off the path of his true potential and greatness. Gatsby’s approach of trying to prove the legitimacy of his seemingly artificial election results in his subsequent downfall and bars him from finding eventual and long-term success. The reader sees how this Gatsby’s approach fails, and although he has potential and greatness within him, the East wastes him away by the end of the novel, never fully reaching the limit of his potential. Somewhere on the track that greatness lays for Catherine and Gatsby, he veers off, leaving Nick to pick up where he left off.
“ Its attitude is one of disillusionment and detachment; Fitzgerald is still able to evoke the glitter of the 1920s but he is no longer dazzled by it; he sees its underlying emptiness and impoverishment” (Trendell 23)The story is narrated from the point of view of Nick, one of Gatsby’s friends. The problematic and hopeless romantic, Gatsby, sets out to fulfill his dream in acquiring Daisy, his lifelong love, through his many tactics and ideas. Gatsby is introduced extending his arms mysteriously toward a green light in the direction of the water. Later, Gatsby is shown to be the host of many parties for the rich and Nick is invited to one of these parties where Gatsby and Nick meet. When Gatsby later confesses his love for Daisy he explains she was a loved one who was separated from him and hopes to get her again explained when he says, “I hope she'll be a fool -- that's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool”(Fitzgerald 56). There are several obstacles that Gatsby must overcome and the biggest one that is Daisy’s current fiancé but that still does not get in the way of him trying to recover Daisy’s old feelings. His attempts are made through money and wealth because he tries to buy her love back instead of letting it happen naturally.
...s motivation to reach into Daisy’s heart is the downfall that lead to Gatsby’s persistent nature which concentrate solely the past, Also, emptiness of existence with realization to taint ideal, Gatsby’s heart fill with illusions. As a great man his death overflows with generosity and kindness that people did not notice. The good man Gatsby’s death is a tragic, but in the end it’s another meaningless loss that buried as a lonely hero.
...s drive him to be patient, determined, secretive, and careless with his wealth. He truly was a “great” man, as title suggest, stating from nothing but through hope and inspiration from his one true love he creates a “promising future” for himself (Myer). While at first the traits Gatsby posses may seem in some ways beneficial, they prove themselves to be just the opposite as this story progressed. One reason proving that these qualities were detrimental was the fact that Jay Gatsby possessed and used the qualities for all the wrong reasons. The main reason being that Gatsby did everything for Daisy was one of his greatest assets and sweetest downfalls. Furthermore, Gatsby allowed these traits to consume him and cause him to make poor mistakes, thus leading to his tragic death. And although that is true, his unbending love for her ruined him even before his death.
... Nick makes a small funeral for Gatsby and Daisy does not attend it. He took the blame for her, and he is dead all because of her, he sacrificed for her. She and Tom decide to travel and take off. Also Nick breaks up with Jordan, and he moves back to Midwest because he has had enough of these people, and hates the people that were close to Gatsby and for bareness, emptiness, and cold heart they have of the life in the middle of the wealthy on the East Coast. Nick realizes, and reveals that Gatsby’s dream of Daisy was ruined by money and un-loyalty, dishonestly. Daisy all she cared about is wealth, she chased after the men that have a lot of money. Even though Gatsby has control, influence, and authority to change his dreams into making it into real life for him this is what Nicks says makes him a good man. Now both Gatsby’s dream and the American Dream are over.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald conveys how Jay Gatsby’s ambition is the root of his success and death. When Gatsby, a man of humble beginnings, meets Daisy, her wealth and high status allures him. They fall in love, but due to Gatsby’s low financial and social position, Daisy feels insecure and leaves him. Gatsby’s optimism and obsession to win Daisy prompts the ambition that ultimately drives him to his noble yet tragic ending.
When you take them together, however, you discover the complicated and unique individual that is Jay Gatsby. One of the traits of Gatsby that makes him truly great is his remarkable capacity for hope. He has faith that what he desires will come to him if he works hard enough. He does not comprehend the cruelty and danger that is the rest of the world. Gatsby, while a man of questionable morals, is as wide-eyed and innocent as a small child in his views of the world.
Nick describes Gatsby as “one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life(Ch.3).” Such description unifies the appearance of Gatsby with people’s expectation of a man who accomplished the American dream. The obsession with wealth often blinds people from the potential crisis. The crisis of having everything they worked and struggled for redefined if the reality fails them. Just like strivers who chase the American dream, Gatsby also spent his whole life in pursuit of his American dream, which Daisy was a major component of.
Gatsby is not so great because he is a liar. From the very start Gatsby is said to be an alumnus from Oxford, who fought in WWI, hunted big game, and had parents from the Midwest. He even justifies himself when Nicks asks and Gatsby pulls out a picture of him at Oxford and a WWI medal that he carried around in his pocket. He even changed his name, James Gatz to Jay Gatsby, but why? “James Gatz – that was really, or at least legally, his name. He had changed it at the age of seventeen and at the specific moment that witnessed the beginning of his career” (6). Gatsby is mysterious and mystifying, known for his large parties yet no one knows why he has them. Keep in mind this is the prohibition era, but at Gatsby’s parties there is always plenty of alcohol to go around and no one knows where it comes from or how he acquires so much, one of the many mysteries. In attendance at these parties there are people like Meyer Wolfshiem “the man who really did fix the 1919 World Series” (118), to the mayors and governors. More questions arise in this company as to how Gatsby is associated with gangsters and why they attend these large parties. It is completely ironic how so many attend these parties but none ...
As Gatsby, at least in the eyes of many critics, should represent the idea of the American Dream, the presentation of his character puts the whole concept in question again, without being intended as criticism. This is mainly the fault of another weak character in the novel, Nick Carraway. At first, the only function of Nick in the novel seems to be to act as a reporter, telling us the truth by telling us his shrewd, objective perceptions. Then, as the novel progresses, it turns out that the opposite is the case, and he is siding with Gatsby to make this character stand above all others and shine. Nick Carraway is one of the finest examples of reader manipulation in literature.
... in The Great Gatsby so the two characters can emphasize their goals by working together, which in this case was Gatsby's reunion with Daisy. With the Nick's realization of Gatsby being a genuinely good-hearted man who wanted nothing else but love, he forever sides with him against the other shallow, careless characters. Omitting the fact Gatsby died as an effect of dreaming so much, Nick, on his own accord, tries to dream himself simply because Jay Gatsby made a hopeful future seem so ideal and attainable. Once Nick realizes he can't do exactly that, he gives up, throws everything away, and is left only with memories that eventually matured him to tell his story, to tell his reasoning how and why Mr. Gatsby ended up so respectable and great in his eyes: Gatsby had an incorruptible dream of love, and that was what had completely magnetized Nick to his polar opposite.
Starting at a young age Gatsby strives to become someone of wealth and power, leading him to create a façade of success built by lies in order to reach his unrealistic dream. The way Gatsby’s perceives himself is made clear as Nick explains: “The truth was Jay Gatsby of West Egg, Long Island, sprang his Platonic conception of himself. He was a son of God… he must be about His Father’s business, the service of a vast, vulgar, and meretricious beauty” (Fitzgerald 98). From the beginning Gatsby puts himself beside God, believing he is capable of achieving the impossible and being what he sees as great. Gatsby blinds himself of reality by idolizing this valueless way of life, ultimately guiding him to a corrupt lifestyle. While driving, Nick observes Gatsby curiously: “He hurried the phrase ‘educated at Oxford,’ or swallowed it, or choked on it, as though it had bothered him before. And with this doubt, his whole statement fell to pieces…” (Fitzgerald 65). To fulfill his aspirations Gatsby desires to be seen an admirable and affluent man in society wh...
We persist in believing, despite that we live in an anti-heroic, anti-tragic age. Gatsby is the Great Gatsby because Nick thinks he is. After meeting Gatsby, Nick realizes he represents everything he has be taught to scorn, to disapprove of. Even with all of the fancy cars, and luxurious house, rumor says he is a criminal and a killer. Nick uses Gatsby as a model, he realizes that he is the pursued, pursuing, the busy, and the tired. Nick is none of those and possessed by a fear of life. Gatsby's commitment is not to a Daisy, but to a dream. Even if Daisy is corrupt, Gatsby's dream of her is not. Nick cannot be like Gatsby because he cannot choose to have a vision. Even if Nick did, he would not have the commitment. Although Nick must disapprove of Gatsby from beginning to end, he is able to see and affirm what Gatsby represents. Nick finally realizes that he becomes in earnest, the guide, the pathfinder he put himself up for when he arrived at West Egg. Gatsby is the hero we should acknowledge and affirm, but Nick is the hero we really want to
The novel, The Great Gatsby focuses on one of the focal characters, James Gatz, also known as Jay Gatsby. He grew up in North Dakota to a family of poor farm people and as he matured, eventually worked for a wealthy man named Dan Cody. As Gatsby is taken under Cody’s wing, he gains more than even he bargained for. He comes across a large sum of money, however ends up getting tricked out of ‘inheriting’ it. After these obstacles, he finds a new way to earn his money, even though it means bending the law to obtain it. Some people will go to a lot of trouble in order to achieve things at all costs. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, conveys the numerous traits of Jay Gatsby through the incidents he faces, how he voices himself and the alterations he undergoes through the progression of the novel. Gatsby possesses many traits that help him develop as a key character in the novel: ambitious, kind-hearted and deceitful all of which is proven through various incidents that arise in the novel.
Gatsby reveals that his parties and success were all created to catch Daisy’s attention, hoping that she would notice and fall in love with him. This strongly supports the overall theme that Fitzgerald gives, since Gatsby is relying on his wealth and popularity to make him look desirable, mostly for someone specific. Nick complies with his request and brings the two together. He now blatantly knows that Gatsby’s wealth is all fake, yet once again he does not change his perspective of him. Later in the story, he also discovers that Gatsby was falsely taking the blame for a murder that Daisy had done. This is shocking to both the reader and Nick. However, by the end of the novel, Nick tells of how great Gatsby was and how he is the only person who has seen the true side of him. After experiencing Gatsby, from his false wealth to his pitiful death, Nick still believes he is a good man, which greatly represents his
“Guided only by Nick’s limited view of her, readers often judge Daisy solely on the basis of her superficial qualities” (Fryer 43). What the reader sees through the eyes of Nick only appears as a woman whose impatience and desire for wealth and luxury cost her the love of her life, Gatsby. Nick’s narrow perception does not allow one to see that “. [Daisy’s] silly manner conceals a woman of feeling or that her final ‘irresponsibility’ towards Gatsby stems from an acute sense of responsibility towards herself” and that Nick “.clearly does not understand what motivates her” (Fryer 43).