The Great Gatsby Significance Essay

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Moment of significance- The Great Gatsby
Many novels contain moments of significance for the characters. On such novel is The Great Gatsby by F.Scott.Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald was the most famous chronicler of 1920’s America, an era that he dubbed ‘the jazz age’. The great Gatsby revels in the glamour and romance of the careless rich while seeing through the glitter to the moral emptiness and hypocrisy beneath. The novel tells the story of a man, Jay Gatsby who is driven by a love for a woman who symbolizes everything he desires. Daisy Buchanan is an impossible and unattainable ideal. Throughout the novel we see how Gatsby’s American dream progresses and the ultimately falls apart in the end. During the moment of significance the importance of time and past is emphasised as we begin to see Gatsby’s unsurpassable dream unravel.
The character Jay Gatsby has a moment of significance in the novel where …show more content…

He is hurting so much that he does not realise that the girl he loved only loved him for his money, so he continues to battle on as his love for her is still strong. Gatsby is an admirable character – despite the crushing realisation, he does not give up on his dream. In many ways he is a symbol of the American dream: perusing his ultimate goal with unwavering fervour. However, he is a tragic character as his dream eventually becomes self-destructive.
The importance of time and past manifests itself in the confrontation between Gatsby and Tom. Tom invokes with his and Daisy’s intimate past to remind her that she had feelings for him; by controlling the past, Tom eradicates Gatsby’s visions of the future. That Tom feels secure enough to send Daisy back to East Egg with Gatsby. Daisy is exposed and we no longer see her as an innocent character, and on the way the way back to Long Island her recklessness resulted in the brutal death of Myrtle Wilson.
“Was Daisy driving? ‘Yes’ he said after a moment, ‘but of course I’ll say I

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