Quotes About Money And Morals In The Great Gatsby

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Money and Morals in The Great Gatsby

In the dramatic, best-selling novel The Great Gatsby penned by the late F. Scott Fitzgerald, the story is narrated by Nick Carraway, who is moving from the quiet, timid life to a much more flashing yet immoral lifestyle accompanied by his new friend and interesting focused character, Jay Gatsby, who has a infatuation with Nick’s cousin, Daisy. This story tells of curved love, leading reckless lifestyles, and the careless action of using money as a safety net so one would feel justified for committing immoral things.
The novel carries themes of money and it’s corruption, the goal of achieving the american dream no matter what the cost, or to at least seem like one has made it. Society and it’s values are …show more content…

There’s a large billboard here, with large, blue spectacle-rimmed eyes—the last vestige of an advertising attempt by a long-vanished eye doctor—stares down upon the citizens. These unblinking eyes watch over everything that happens in the ‘valley of ashes’. Analyzing this, the valley of ashes is unlike the other settings of the novel, indirectly showing poverty, desolation, and hard labor. It lacks the beautiful and glamorous facade that West Egg and East Egg both share, the ash symbolizing the hidden moral decay. Underneath both side’s charming display, they are both producing ugly, morally depraved characters that may seem delightful but are truly repulsive …show more content…

The most interesting part about this is that it’s the first time Daisy is emotionally spoken, not from her reuniting with Gatsby, not from seeing his massive mansion or even by talking to him for hours on end, but is brought to tears by his display of wealth. Clearly, in her world, a certain amount of wealth is a bridge over a barrier for any relationship.
In comparison to Gatsby, Tom is an even more monstrous man than he was already described. In an attempt to win Daisy’s favor first coming into the novel, he uses Nick as an asset to bring Daisy closer to him, sending over lavish flowers and using his means to clean and prepare Nick’s dinky old house so that it holds a more romantic glow.
A repeating theme happening in the novel is Greed, one that is expressed through the desire to for wealth, for another’s spouse, for a lavish lifestyle and to never be punished for any wrong doing. Gatsby is greedy as he desires Daisy to be his alone, and went through great measures to try and make her his. Tom is greedy having control over Daisy, thanks to her dependence on him, whilst having an affair with another

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