The Role Of Wealth In The Great Gatsby

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The roaring 20's was a time of extravagant parties, excessive drinking, and introduced a new way of living. The cause of all of this was the drastic increase of wealth, also known as the "new money". These people got rich fast with little work. People had more money than ever, and they didn't know how to spend their makings, so they spent it freely. Ever since the beginning of time, individuals were separated and classified by their monetary worth. The two main differences in wealth in this novel is the old money and the new money. The old money were rich individuals who earned their riches by being born into it or from hard work. While the new money earned their wealth through luck. There was a sense of tension between these two groups of …show more content…

Daisy is a captivating woman who is married to a man named Tom Buchanan. They are considered to be of the old money, and are extremely wealthy. She desires a life of adventure, and constantly seeks out attention from any man. Daisy is unhappy with her life, for she loved someone long ago before she had met Tom, and his name was Gatsby. Her and Gatsby were madly in love, but something kept them apart, and that was money. "'She only married you because I was poor and she was tired of waiting for me"'( Fitzgerald 130). For five years Gatsby had moved up the social hierarchy and became a millionaire, and it was all for Daisy. Daisy only married Tom for his money and left Gatsby because he had none. The theme in this novel is monetary worth. Gatsby was constantly throwing extravagant parties, not for pure amusement or happiness, but in hopefulness. Hope in that one day Daisy would happen to show up to one of his marvelous parties and fall back in love with him. He would show her that he now has the missing piece, wealth. The key factor that ties all of the characters together is the desire for money. The 20's was a time for the rich, and everyone wanted to be apart of it, no matter the

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