Theme Of Unforgettable In The Great Gatsby

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It’s the peak of the nineteen twenties, a time of great modernism and materialism in America. Stockbroker Nick Caraway, a new arrival in Long Island, resides next to a secretive billionaire who goes by the name of Jay Gatsby. Gatsby soon recruits Nick to aid him in rekindling flames with Gatsby’s lost love, Daisy Buchanan, who is actually Nick’s cousin. Although successful at first, the team encounters circumstances that divide Gatsby and Daisy from one another. This story is that of author F. Scott Fitzgerald’s highly acclaimed novel The Great Gatsby. Throughout the tale, the theme that the past is unforgettable is developed through the character Gatsby and his relationship with his long-lost lover, his obsession with material items, and his concealment of the truth.
Gatsby’s determination to reunite with the precious Mrs. Daisy
No matter the circumstance, Gatsby is always willing to perform any task in order to impress her. On one tense evening out on the town, Gatsby is caught in a fight over Daisy with her brute of a husband Tom. Jeffery Myers, a highly credible writer and analyst, writes, “Gatsby…naively believes he can repeat¬…the past. Not satisfied to win Daisy 's love, he unrealistically insists that she also deny her former love for Tom and return to the pristine virginity she possessed when Gatsby first met her” (35). Alas, the events of the evening aren’t in Gatsby’s favor. By making justified speculations and personal jabs, Tom exposes Gatsby’s hidden bootlegging business to Daisy, who strongly rejects such reckless and illegal activity. This revelation is a major setback in Gatsby’s plan to convince Daisy to abandon Tom in order to be with him.

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