F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby

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Money: Pursuit of Happiness?
In America, citizens are involuntary required to rely on money to subsistingly survive. Over the years, money has transitioned from a simple necessity to the epicenter of all thoughts and decisions. Now, the concept of living a comfortable and pleasant life is associated with the amount of money in one’s wallet. Americans identify this wealth with freedom, stability, and happiness. Yet in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s widely debatable novel, The Great Gatsby, money takes on the role of a luxurious posession that blinds people of the meaning behind true love and happiness. Fitzgerald utilizes the lifestyles of his characters to portray that money, while having the ablility to satisfy materialistic desires, is not able to purchase feelings of psychological fulfillment which corrupts the capacity to ever be satisfied.
In the media, there are often stories of famous older celebrities marrying a woman or man who is significantly younger than them. Viewers can’t help but think that the younger individual must be with the older man for the money. Such stories subliminally scream the message that if a person of romantic interest posesses a desirable amount of money, a straight way to happiness is to be with that person. Although a person with a lot of money might render financial security and stability, it won’t, however, possibly mask a lover’s terrible personality. Daisy, while being married to “…one of the most powerful ends…” ( Fitzgerald 6), carries within her, “…and expression of unthoughtful sadness.” (13) Even though Daisy has possibly everything she could ever want, she is still unsatisfied with life and is searching for something better. “[Her and Tom] had spent a year in France for no particular reason... ...

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...th of the matter is, though, that people become slaves to money and all it entails. Not only does it diminish all senses of morality completely, it is an empty cure for man’s inexplicable fight with loneliness. Fitzgerald shows Gatsby base his dreams, goals, and aspirations all in what he believes his money is able to reach. He does not realize, however, that money does not satisfy nonmaterialistic fulfillment. With Daisy “leaving Gatsby—nothing…” (149), Gatsby’s dreams are truly not satisfied with what he has worked years for. Daisy and Tom vanish after causing more problems in pursuit of the happiness that money wasn’t able to provide through meaningless relationships and poor decisions. Fitzgerald proves that the path to happiness is not made permissible by money.

Works Cited
Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York, NY: Scribner, 1953.

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