What Is Daisy's Transformation In The Great Gatsby

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The leading ladies of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby unveils women’s transition into quasi-transformation. Set in the 1920s, Daisy Buchanan is a characterture of the time’s traditional woman who was ascending into the new expectation of society, a modern twist. Nick Carraway, the narrator of the story, is taken with her from the start, as all men seem to be. In her introductions (first to Nick, then from Jordan’s memory) she is described as a beautiful, charming creature draped in white, whose external purity creates a sort of otherworldliness about her. Daisy is not particularly intellectual nor curious; she lets herself be completely dependent on others for any sort of guidance. Her closest friend, Jordan Baker, challenges Daisy’s character in their juxtaposition. While Daisy’s …show more content…

Based on his limited acquaintance with her, he believes that her husband, Tom Buchanan, “would drift on forever seeking” for her heart. This might just be considered an unfair conjecture on the narrator’s part. Further reading provides evidence for the reader to reach their own conclusion. Though he is supposedly a man devoted to being the object of Daisy’s love, Tom is an unfaithful man. Daisy is aware of this, but continues to play at her sweet naïvity. This is the first of many instances that reveal who Daisy Buchanan really is. Her submissiveness and acceptance of her husband’s affair coupled with the debatable love she has for her husband illuminates the truth about Daisy’s character. Contrary to her angelic first impression, Daisy is manipulative and nefarious as the rest. She is a materialistic woman; her identity is in her husband’s wallet (what he is willing to spend on her) and she is content with that. When Gatsby comes into the picture, she chooses he cheating husband for the security he provides her, though she is clearly not devoted to him as marriage

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