Dynamism In The Great Gatsby

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The Struggle between Stasis and Dynamism While Scott Fitzgerald pictures the American dream against fatalism as “so we beat on, boats against current, borne back ceaselessly into the past” (Fitzgerald), William Falkner, an author in the same age, also profoundly discusses the struggle between static and dynamic perspective of destiny. The answer to the question whether actions change life is the same for both writers. While Fitzgerald focuses on the melancholy and inevitability of the poor to surmount the social class barrier despite Gatsby’s endeavor, Falkner implies the failure of the poor to secure independence and dynamism through the struggle of Jewel to balance his dynamism and the burden to bury his mother in Jefferson. Before the journey …show more content…

To compensate for the mules lost in the river, Anse viciously steals Cash’s cash and sells Jewel’s precious horse for fifty dollars. The unexpected interruption of Jewel’s integration by Anse, as the fight between stasis and dynamism, suggests that despite one’s aspiration to be dynamic like an oasis in a wasteland, the pervasive stasis will prey on the previous endeavor in a stealthy way as if the wasteland is unblessed by God. In response to the surprising sale, Jewel responds with silent approval that he merely rides the horse away and sell him without the mention of sadness or exasperation. As Jewel’s shown emotion follows his wooden-like physical appearance, his inner grief is implied by the significance of the horse. Vardaman repeats that “Jewel’s mother is a horse” (196). “Mother” means spiritual nursing in that Jewel is driven by the dynamism of the horse to conquer the hardships in the river and the unbearableness to stay with the rest of the Bundren. The horse is his power and the light of his vitality; therefore, the deprivation of the horse is the denunciation of his energy and freedom, which symbolizes Jewel’s concession to restrains and stasis. When Darl deliberately sets fire on the barn to burn Addie’s coffin, Jewel rushes into the fire to save the mules and Addiels coffin. Almost saves everything himself, Jewel lets the coffin “topples forward, gaining momentum, reavealing Jewel and the sparks raining on him…he appears to be enclosed in a thin nimbus of fire” (222). The “raining sparks” and “thin nimbus of fire” are epic, heroic imageries that present Jewel as a Christ-like figure who undergoes tremendous physical suffering for the salvation of someone. The given momentum from Jewel indicates that Jewel sacrifices and passes his dynamism to the coffin so that his mother’s wish is accomplished. After securing the coffin from the fire, Jewel’s mission is nearly finished. Ironically, in contrast to Anse, who calls the

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