What Does The Green Light Symbolism In The Great Gatsby

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Light at the End of the Tunnel In the book, “The Great Gatsby,” by F. Scott Fitzgerald, it is about a mysteriously wealthy man who is obsessed with a girl named Daisy. He is in love with Daisy and has become rich in order to impress her. The main theme of the story is also about the American Dream. The story takes place in the summer of 1922 in Long Island, New York. There are many symbols in book that is connected to the 1920’s American Dream. It was a time where people who are rich live luxuriously and were also materialistic. Fitzgerald shows the American Dream as a time when there is a decline of social and moral values. It goes to symbolize that the American Dream can be achieved, but people become materialistic and is an impossible standard The green light is significant because it symbolizes Gatsby’s dream for the future. It is associated with Daisy, and subsequently money and status. In order to have her, he would have to be rich and achieve the American Dream. It is the green light that lead him to his goal. After he had returned from the war and was able to be rich, he bought a mansion directly across from Daisy. His obsession for Daisy is connected to the American Dream. The first time Nick had seen Gatsby, “he stretched out his arms toward the dark water in a curious way, and, far as I was from him, I could have sworn he was trembling. Involuntarily I glanced seaward – and distinguished nothing except a single green light, minute and far away” (Fitzgerald 33). This quote shows him reaching towards the green light, which is like him reaching to Daisy. It symbolizes his hope to It represents the wastes and results of capitalism. The people and the environment itself are suffering because of it. It is also symbolic that Mrytle had died in the Valley of Ashes, which further shows that she could not escape her own social economic status. The ashes that are representative in the story are the people who are pulling further away from the American Dream because they are greedy, arrogant, and self-centered like Mrytle. The can be concluded that the American Dream in the 1920s benefited those who are able to work hard and strive for a better

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