Wealth In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald's portrayal of the lavish excesses and counterfeit of 1920s American society serves as a critique of the shallow materialism and the corrupt morality that was prevalent among the wealthy elite, which was further split apart by the difference in societal values and generational wealth. Fitzgerald's depiction of the extravagant parties and lifestyles of characters like Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan serves to portray the superficial materialism that permeated 1920s American society, highlighting the disconnect between wealth and moral integrity. Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan show off their wealth in different ways. Tom Buchanan has “old money” and his wealth is shown off in more of a modest way with cars and …show more content…

Fitzgerald's criticism of the immoral behavior of individuals like Tom and Daisy Buchanan, who put their material riches and social standing ahead of the welfare of others, ultimately caused devastation in their now “so called-pasts.” F. Scott Fitzgerald's childhood experiences influenced his perspective on the illusion and counterfeit of wealth, a theme deeply embedded in The Great Gatsby. One of Fitzgerald’s biographers, Mary Jo Tate, reveals that when he was growing up in a series of rented houses and apartments in the Summit Avenue area, Fitzgerald experienced financial instability firsthand, witnessing his family's struggles to maintain social standing in an affluent society (Tate). He had a well-built awareness at an early age of how money could come and go along with the façade it could have on social standing as a result of its flow. Another one of Fitzgerald's biographers, Norma Jean Lutz, focuses on his troubled marriage to Zelda Sayre, which was marked by flashy declarations of love and destructive

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