Why Is Gatsby Called Great

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In Chapter Eight of The Great Gatsby Carraway states that “They’re a rotten crowd, you’re worth the whole damn bunch put together”(Fitzgerald p.154). Greatness is defined as above the normal or average. James Gatz, better known as Jay Gatsby is called great by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Why is Gatsby called great? His greatness can be interpreted in many different ways. Gatsby’s greatness extends to large themes of the novel of the American Dream, wealth and prosperity, and love,
“Whatever the American Dream has become, its truest contemporary representative remains Jay Gatsby” (Palladino). Gatsby journey from rags to riches exemplifies the idea of the American Dream in the 1920s. Gatsby illustrates both the distorted and the original uncorrupted American Dream. He views wealth as the key to solving his problems. His involvement in bootlegging shows that he is involved a lot in money. He engages himself so much that he becomes disconnected from his past. Gatsby's corrupt dream of wealth is inclined by an incorruptible love for Daisy. Gatsby's failure does not prove the corruptness of the American Dream. It …show more content…

When Nick describes Gatsby in Chapter Two, he says “On weekends his Rolls Royce became an omnibus, bearing parties to and from the city between nine in the morning and long past midnight” (Fitzgerald p.39). Gatsby’s display of wealth is shown by the extravagant parties he throws. Nick states that “I believe on the first night I went to Gatsby’s house I was one of the few guests who had actually been invited” (Fitzgerald p.41). Gatsby is able to take care of all the guests that show up uninvited to his mansion. Gatsby’s greatness is sometimes masked within his money because he tries to use money as an illusion to his life to buy back love. While wealth and money are a big reason why Gatsby is called great, his demonstration of the lengths he will go to love are both admiring and

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