Characteristics Of Jay Gatsby

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In my opinion it was be very difficult to argue that Jay Gatsby was an admirable, heroic or “great” person who accomplished the American Dream when one considers the way the story played out at the end. At almost every turn he is at odds with the ideals of the dream because he originally came upon his fortune in an illegal and arguably unethical manner. Similarly, he seems to believe that everything in life can simply be bought – Daisy’s love, the respect of his peers and social status in general. “Can 't repeat the past?" Jay at one point cries incredulously when Nick Carroway wonders about his intention to start seeing Daisy again "why of course you can!” (Fitzgerald, 1925, 153) His wealth and status have corrupted him so utterly that he This idea all comes crashing down as the reader begins to learn more about his background and gets to see his actions throughout the story. He is clearly a man with an incredible work-ethic, his daily schedule from 1906 sees him “Rise from bed” at 6am and get straight to “dumbbell exercise and wall-scaling” (Fitzgerald, 1925, 104). Nick hears from his that that “Jimmy was bound to get ahead. He always had some resolves like this or something. Do you notice what he 's got about improving his mind? He was always great for that. He told me I et like a hog once, and I beat him for it". (Fitzgerald, 1925, Scott Fitzgerald himself were so caught up with was more about the “pursuit of happiness” than anything else. Somewhere along the line, Jay seems to get this confused with the pursuit of wealth and status at the cost of everything else. While this paper has certainly made the case that Gatsby is not admirable, heroic or representative of the American Dream it is not to say that he is not a sympathetic character, either. He has been absolutely corrupted by the idea of achieving his dream and has simply wound up going about it in completely the wrong way. Nick, at one point in the novel, argues that Gatsby is “worth the whole damn bunch together” (Fitzgerald, 1925, 45) reflecting his apparent belief that Gatsby is actually a decent man who has perhaps gotten involved with the wrong sort of people. Pearson (1970, 126)

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