What Does The Green Light Symbolize In The Great Gatsby

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Money is not love. This is shown in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby when Jay Gatsby tries to buy his way back to his love, Daisy Buchanan. This story is placed in the 1920’s to show the audience the lack of social and moral values, the need for pleasure, and the destruction of ones American Dream. Fitzgerald tells us the story through Nick Carroway’s, a war veteran living in West Egg who now sells bonds, point of view. The story is compiled of characterization, flashbacks, imagery, conflict, and most importantly symbolism. Jay Gatsby, a resident of West Egg, was sent to war 5 years prior to 1922. When he left he was to marry his love, Daisy Fay of Louisville, Kentucky, but he lacked the money needed to take care of her. When he returns from the war he buys a mansion in Long Island at West Egg, right across the bay from Tom and Daisy Buchanan’s house. The green light that emerges from the Buchanan’s dock is a very significant symbol in the novel. “Gatsby believed in the green light…” (Fitzgerald 182) Carroway writes telling us that there is something special about it. The “green” light represents the easy money during this time period. You can have elaborate parties, fancy cars, and a huge …show more content…

Throughout the novel we are shown Gatsby’s odd yet successful life. The details of his life are given through point of views and flash backs. Gatsby believed that he was a son of God therefore he could become anything he dreamed of. People shared their thoughts on Gatsby and what they had heard about him, but none of it was true. No one ever really knew the truth about Gatsby. According to rumors he had killed a man, he was a German spy, he was a cousin of the Kaiser, and he was an Oxford man. "It was in nineteen-nineteen, I only stayed five months. That’s why I can’t really call myself an Oxford man." (129) Gatsby said, making the reader think that maybe some of the rumors really were

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