Theme Of Light In The Great Gatsby

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What is light? Although light tends to be quite hard to explain, it's simply what allows us to see the world we live in. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and A Streetcar Named Desire by Tennessee Williams, light plays a momentous token role. Light is present in both novels to help characters “dwell on the past” in a way of speaking. Furthermore, light can also be symbolic in both stories as a representative of love and, finally, theirs a link between light and the progression of characters and plot graph. Blanche Dubois uses light to be able to hide from harsh lighting so her wrinkles don't show. For Gatsby, light represents his dream, which is Daisy.
In The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby, the protagonist, the theme of the green light at the end of Daisy's dock is very significant. The green light is a great representative of his goal in life, which is to be able to be with Daisy once again after five years of self reconstruction. This is quite indisputable when Nick says: “He had waited five years and bought a mansion where he
Everything that Jay Gatsby does is to be able to have Daisy back in his life as a lover, that includes the extravagant parties that he throws just in case someone might invite her along. The green light is evocative of the theme of love in the novel. The first time that the green light appeared in the novel was also the first time that Nick Carraway saw Gatsby for the very first time: “... he stretched out his arms toward the dark water in a curious way...(Fitzgerald 17)”.The light seem to make him to reach for Daisy in a figurative way of speaking. By doing so it's the love that Gatsby shares for Daisy is quite understandable in every aspect in correlation to the green light. It seems to be

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