Unconditional Love In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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J. Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan have always been a tragic love story for the one thing that Gatsby yearned for his entire life was, in the end, what corrupted him and did him in, love. However, the message of unconditional love can relate back to the main theme of the novel. To love one another unconditionally even if it corrupts you in the end. To love someone unconditionally is to love someone throughout all of their flaws, or troubles in their lives. The message is displayed through Daisy and Gatsby’s relationship. Although they were separated for many years, their feelings never truly went away. Gatsby felt betrayed for Daisy leaving him years before, but he never stopped loving her. Even in the very end, he died with the hope of receiving …show more content…

F. Scott Fitzgerald takes the reader back into the 1920’s, and also back into what his life was like. The setting is used to show the theme by displaying the wild, crazy, passionate love. Also, how the setting has been used to separate the characters as well. Daisy is influenced by the overly glamorous lifestyle of the roaring twenties; however, due to this she prioritizes wealth over any other aspect. Therefore, creates the war that separates Daisy from Gatsby that leads her to change her mind and marry Tom instead of Gatsby, as she craved security. She remains a very flat and shallow character throughout the novel as she finds security from external sources such as wealth and clothes. She displays this with Gatsby, “It makes me sad because I’ve never seen such - such beautiful shirts before” (Fitzgerald 87). The roaring twenties is a display of wealth, and mad love. Fitzgerald and Zelda displayed this, “Scott and Zelda drank, went to parties, and made the gossip columns. They tried to outdo one another in their zaniness -- Scott tore his shirt off in a theater, Zelda rode on the hood of a taxi; he jumped into one public found, she into another” (Oxford). The setting within the novel ties together the story, and how it was like during the roaring twenties bringing it

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