Tom Buchanan Character Analysis

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Tom Buchanan is a main character of The Great Gatsby, which is written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. He is an important character to the story’s plot and the symbolism of the book. He impacts others characters’ thoughts and actions greatly due to his brash personality and his careless actions. Tom is an important character because of his relationships to many characters such as Daisy, his wife, and Myrtle Wilson, his mistress. From the first chapter, we know that Tom isn’t loyal to his wife. We know this because the narrator, Nick Carraway, has dinner with Tom and Daisy and discovers that the person calling Tom is his mistress. Tom also has a relationship with Nick. They knew each other in college and Daisy is Nick’s cousin. Tom is a very wealthy Tom’s actions of cheating on Daisy led to her feeling unloved and in return, cheated on him with Gatsby. This all leads to Myrtle, Gatsby and George’s deaths. Tom does nothing to right these wrongs, instead he leaves town. Nick is the one who cleans up the mess. This leads Nick to criticize Tom. Nick now feels that all of the characters with “old money” that he met are fake, and loses friendships with all of them. If Fitzgerald didn’t create this character, the story would be drastically different. Due to his relationships to the other characters, Nick, Daisy and Myrtle would be different characters. Daisy might have waited for Gatsby to return from war and gotten married. The book would be different because of Fitzgerald’s way of using Tom to symbolize the upper class. He wanted to portray the upper class as brash and careless and that wouldn't be possible without Tom’s role. As you can see, Tom Buchanan is an important character in The Great Gatsby. His personality leads to many characters not trusting him or not liking him. Tom’s actions then leads to the deaths of several characters. Instead of taking ownership of the unjust deaths, he takes Daisy and together they leave. This shows the carelessness and selfishness that Fitzgerald tries to portray as the upper class of the

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