Nick's Use Of Materialism In The Great Gatsby

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In the novel, The Great Gatsby (1925) by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author follows a group of characters living on the prosperous Long Island in the summer of 1922. The author, F. Scott Fitzgerald is able to implement the use of a variety of themes into the storyline, presenting them to the readers through gradual development. The characters live in the fictional towns of East Egg and West Egg. The main character James Gatz is from the West Egg, and Daisy Buchanan along with her husband Tom are from the East Egg. There has always been issues occurring between the two eggs, the East Egg and the West Egg. The East Egg is said to resemble to experience, the established aristocracy. The East is viewed as a place with grace, taste, subtlety, and …show more content…

He showed an immense amount of innocence after obtaining a large amount of money. Through illegal ways, their desires were met and adultery was committed. Daisy and Tom, living in the East Egg experience such extravagance and elegance, while Gatsby is not very much affected by the amount of materialistic items. Through the eyes of Nick Carraway, he viewed Gatsby as if there was “something gorgeous about him, some heightened sensitivity to the promises of life” (page 2). Gatsby can be easily seen as an optimist, taking life for what it is and having his extraordinary gift for hope and luck. He had earned a large amount of wealth and materialistic items, in hopes that he can one day win back the love he once had with the perfect girl, Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby had gone above and beyond in ways to impress Daisy, buying a large mansion just across the bay from her. Gatsby had “half expected her to wander into one of his parties some night” (page 79). He wanted their interaction after so long to be a coincidence, showing off the wealth he had gained. Gatsby was known to throw these lavish and extreme mansion parties, in the single hopes that the woman of his dreams would once walk through that door. The innocence in Gatsby was something that could not be tampered or tainted with. Deep down, the West Egg new money stuck with him during his search for his …show more content…

Daisy was young and “her artificial world was redolent of orchids and pleasant, cheerful snobbery and orchestras which set the rhythm of the year, summing up the sadness and suggestiveness of life in new tunes” (page 151). Daisy can be portrayed as a girl from the graceful and elegant parts of Long Island. She had decided to marry Tom after her and Gatsby had time apart. Tom was seen as the status quo, top of the chain man, who both economically and socially represents the old, inherited money. Marrying someone solely for the reason of wealth will not have a positive outcome in her life. Little does she know, but Tom has a mistress named Myrtle behind her back who also has a husband named George. After meeting Gatsby again, she viewed the West Egg as something much lesser than where she lived and the large difference of their lives. Gatsby had “ deliberately given Daisy a sense of security; he let her believe that he was a person from much the same stratum as herself - that he was fully able to take care of her” (page 149). Gatsby was determined to show that although he no supportive family standing behind him, he was willing to be with the one he truly loved. There is a vast difference between the two worlds on the opposite sides of the Valley of Ashes. Gatsby is very much fine with his way of living in the West Egg. Whereas Daisy, is scared of the thought of

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