Selfishness In The Great Gatsby

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While The Great Gatsby is set in America in the 1920’s, it is a story that has been told thousands of times, in many different forms, and is as old as humanity itself. The story of a man climbing from rags to riches, only to find out that his wealth cannot buy him what he is truly searching for. These timeless stories are often dominated by great selfishness, and The Great Gatsby is no different. The book’s main character is Jay Gatsby, a wealthy man in New York with an unknown profession, well known for the lavish parties he throws each weekend at his mansion in the West Egg. The story’s narrator, Nick Carraway, moves to a small house next to Gatsby’s mansion in an effort to enter the bond business. Gatsby wants to get close to Daisy again, …show more content…

An example of this in The Great Gatsby is Tom and Daisy Buchanan’s relationship--they both are living a materially wealthy life, but both are hiding an affair from one other. Violating their marriage vows demonstrate their selfishness and unwillingness to think about their spouse first; they instead selfishly pursue their own passions. Daisy shows her self-centeredness through her interactions with both Gatsby and Tom, “ 'Oh, you want too much! ' she cried to Gatsby. 'I love you now, isn 't that enough? I can 't help what 's past. ' She began to sob helplessly. 'I did love him once – but I loved you too. '" (Fitzgerald 141) She claims to love both of them but cannot bring herself to choose one over another. She wants everything she can get her hands on, without considering other people 's feelings. Another example of this selfishness is when she lets Gatsby take the blame for running over Myrtle while she works on her relationship with Tom. This shows that she wants everything her way without having to worry about the consequences. Daisy’s personality and character is described in, “The Problem with The Great Gatsby’s Daisy Buchanan” written by Katie …show more content…

She’s the golden girl and the incorruptible angel and all the Platonic ideals that artists and poets throughout the great ages have required their muses to be…...In his afterward to the 1992 edition, publisher Charles Scribner III writes that Fitzgerald blamed Gatsby’s initial commercial failure on the fact that “the book contains no important woman character and women control the fiction market at present.” Seeing as how Daisy is at the heart of the novel and of Jay Gatsby’s very existence, we can only infer that F. Scott meant his book contained no sympathetic woman character. Edwin Clark, writing the first New York Times review of Gatsby in April 1925, seemed to agree: The East Eggers, he said, had a “meanness of spirit, a carelessness and absence of loyalties…dumb in their insensate selfishness, and only to be pitied.” (Baker

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