Daisy Buchanan Character Analysis Essay

702 Words2 Pages

Drew Marshall
Mrs. Burnett
English
22 September 2015
Daisy Buchanan: The Characterization of a Character With Little Character
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, takes place in the East and West Eggs in Long Island of New York during the 1920’s. Daisy Buchanan, Gatsby’s love, Tom’s prize, and Nick’s cousin, often appears as heartless and shallow. But Daisy possesses virtuous qualities deep within her trapped by patriarchy and Tom, and these hidden qualities along with her more evident traits are exemplified by abstract and concrete symbols throughout the novel.
Several symbols characterize Daisy, the most powerful being a flower and the forbidden fruit. Earlier in Gatsby’s life when he first fell in love with Daisy, he sought
Two distinctive sides illustrated Daisy: that which portrays her as a selfish and neglectful being, and the side that invokes sympathy from the reader as patriarchy and Tom constrain and trap her.
Daisy’s neglectful and greedy behaviour defines itself most vibrantly when her daughter is introduced. When Daisy called for her daughter to come over, she ran into Daisy’s distant arms, as if a stranger held her. Nick believed that Gatsby, the man obsessed with every detail of Daisy, had never “really believed in its existence before,”(Fitzgerald 117). The reference to the child as an “it” further indicates the girl’s distance from Daisy’s life and how her mother abandoned her. In contrast to Daisy’s highly immoral side, she possesses a part of herself trapped within her by male dominance and Tom’s heavy influence. When Daisy birthed a girl, she was glad and said “the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool,”(Fitzgerald 17). Daisy knew obliviousness to her surroundings allowed for more happiness since the truth often hides itself. Daisy’s lack of oblivion allowed her to see the infidelity of Tom, causing her pain, regret, and the shadow of Tom’s life casting over her. She definitely didn’t mind the wealth and status over true love and Gatsby, and the small piece of her longing for Gatsby was continuously beaten down by herself and Tom’s superiority. This leaves Daisy living as

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