Role Of Daisy In The Great Gatsby

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Leland S. Person describes the relationship between Daisy and the other characters in the novel, claiming that Daisy is a “victim” in her relationship with Tom and in her relationship with Gatsby. He describes Daisy as a “victim first of Tom Buchanan’s ‘cruel’ power” and that she is continuously victimized because of Gatsby’s “increasingly depersonalized vision of her.” Person focuses on Daisy’s emotions and compassion, showing that she is not selfish and that the negative views of Daisy that other scholars have claimed is inaccurate because it’s just “their attribution to her of tremendous power over Gatsby and his fate.” Ultimately, Person zeroes in on how Daisy isn’t given her own voice and how the men in the novel have their own interpretations of her or use her as a prized possession and use those interpretations to control her life which makes the men’s life better and easier to cope with. Tie some of Leland’s ideals & maybe Fryer’s ideals throughout the essay …show more content…

From the beginning of the novel to the end, there is a sense that Nick is a very judgmental man, and though he judges also every character in the novel aside from his love for Gatsby, and he even mentioned that “only Gatsby, the man who gives his name to this book, was exempt from my [Nick’s] reaction,” yet he judges other characters and Daisy very harshly and very often

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