A Comparison Of Interpersonal Relationships In The Great Gatsby?

2954 Words6 Pages

In 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s well-known novel The Great Gatsby was published. Since its publishing, there have been three movie adaptations of the book. The most recent one was released on May 1, 2013 staring Tobey Maguire as Nick Carraway, and Leonardo “Still Hasn’t Won an Oscar” DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby. The Great Gatsby contains relationships between multiple characters from platonic and romantic relationships. What is being analyzed is how each main character’s relationships with one another pertain to the concepts associated with interpersonal relationship psychology. The beginning of the movie starts off in 1929, with Nick in a psychiatric hospital to treat his alcoholism. During one of his sessions with his doctor, he talks about Jay Gatsby and his experience during the summer of 1922. Set in the 1920s where prohibition was heavily enforced, Nick Carraway moves back to the West Egg of New York
Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby 2013 movie adaptation shows relationships between characters that can be compared to concepts in interpersonal relationships. The communication, the conflicts, love styles, and how the relationships are perceived between the major characters resemble that of which interpersonal relationship psychologists study. Some examples from two characters Tom and Daisy both are having extradyadic sex in their marriage. There are gender differences between the two, for Tom it is strictly physical compared to his wife’s infidelity. Her affair was emotional due to her husband dismissing her feelings and finding other women to physically engage with. Gatsby’s eros, manic, and ludic love style drive his desire to be with Daisy and cause conflict to get his end goal. Gatsby only became close with Nick and Jordan because of their direct connection to Daisy; however Nick did not befriend Gatsby for any sort of gain. He valued his neighbor as one of the most important people he came in contact with after moving to New

Open Document