The Great Gatsby Essay

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The past, going by in time and no longer existing, allows people to see and reflect on what they have done in their life. F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author of, The Great Gatsby, chooses to include the past in many instances in his novel, allowing him to get a deeper message across to his readers. The novel takes place in New York, where Jay Gatsby, a secretive man, lives. The novel is a condemnation of Gatsby because Fitzgerald guides the reader to discern the idea that the characters of the story are unable to find happiness from reinvention and money because the only way to find true happiness is to look to their past. By condemning Gatsby, Fitzgerald is able to guide the reader to see that reinvention of yourself does not bring happiness because your past is the only place that will truly conduct happiness. This message if first seen through the experience of Jay Gatsby. Gatsby is known in West Egg, an area in New York, as an extremely rich but mysterious man. Only a few people know the true story behind where Gatsby had come from and how he had become the man he is. Gatsby has become such a mysterious man because of the countless lies that he tells people about himself. He wants people to think he is, “the son of some wealthy people in the middle-west” and that he was “brought up in America but educated in Oxford” (Fitzgerald, p.69). Gatsby has created a perfect shroud to hide his true identity from everyone he comes in contact with. To him he may think that he is happy because of how people see him but deep down he knows that he is living in a lie. Fitzgerald is condemning Gatsby because he has completely destroyed his true past for a life where everything that surrounds him is only material, with the inability of providing... ... middle of paper ... ...nities that currently surround them for granted because if they do they could find themselves losing their happiness. Because happiness will always originate from your past, through his condemnation of Gatsby, Fitzgerald is able to advise the reader to know that money is incapable of creating bona fide happiness. In order to condemn Gatsby, Fitzgerald guides the reader to discern the idea that the characters of the story are unable to find happiness from reinvention and money because the only way to find true happiness is to look to their past. By including the failure of money and reinvention in the life of Jay Gatsby, Fitzgerald is able to effectively paint a clear picture that happiness does indeed come from the past. Although the past no longer exists, it is capable of providing lessons to further peoples present and future lives. Works Cited The Great Gatsby

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