Great Gatsby Hope, Wealth, Corruption, And Love

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Great Gatsby Rough Draft
Hope, Wealth, Corruption, and Love. All of these are powerful traits in the man who gives his name to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s masterpiece The Great Gatsby, the extraordinary Jay Gatsby. In a novel filled with many thought provoking themes, incredible stylistic writing, and many insightful characters, the real focus of the story belongs to Gatsby, a man filled with an extraordinary gift for hope and idealization of the world, who hopes to create a greater life for himself and his love, as he falls for the beautiful and idealized Daisy Fay (later Daisy Buchanan).
At the completion of the novel, it becomes clear that Fitzgerald has created a Shakespearean tragic hero in Jay Gatsby. The Shakespearean tragic hero has many …show more content…

Gatsby idealized Daisy upon his first encounter with her, and that ideal still exists in Gatsby, as he believes the only way to win her back is through wealth. Because of his gift, Gatsby becomes corrupted, as he uses corrupt methods to try winning Daisy over, as he becomes a bootlegger for Meyer Wolfsheim to quickly attain wealth and possessions to become good enough for the corrupt and idealistic Daisy.
The ultimate nail in the coffin for Jay Gatsby is caused by his hope, as after winning over Daisy, his hope of returning to the past and having Daisy be his alone, leads to his death, as instead of moving on to greater things once his corrupt dream had seemingly been realized, he wishes for more, as he reveals that he wishes for Daisy to tell her husband that she had never loved him, and that they will return to Louisville and repeat and then re-create the time they had spent together and lost respectively during the past 5

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