Money and Social Class in 'The Great Gatsby'

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The amount of riches one has is generally the first and perhaps the most essential indicator of social class rank. The theme of money is conspicuous in the entire novel, The Great Gatsby. This book has certainly touched the lives of many readers and left some with many questions. The book takes the reader on an unforeseen journey whereby things are not always as they appear. The book can be identified as a social narration of American life in the 1920s, that is, those who were wealthy, by establishing different social circles, old money versus new money, and no money. The Roaring Twenties was considered a period of immense change due to the shift in the classes and the upper class drifting into two separate groups of new money and old money. Those of new money were the newly rich who made their money in a variety of ways. They built the way up to their fortunes and did not inherit anything from anyone but. As for old money consists of blue blooded aristocrats who were born with family ties. They are often seen to be the rational, fashionable and possessed of good taste. They usually look down on people with new money. Like other newly rich people, Tom Buchanan of old money, thinks that Gatsby is a big bootlegger like them. In that time, this clearly shows what As soon as Gatsby’s parties come to a stop, he becomes a thing of the past. There are some references in the book to the attractiveness and importance of coming from old money. Gatsby is completely in fear of Daisy; at one point he states that “Her accent is full of money.” From those on the outside that are not madly in love with Daisy agree that her voice is full of money: Nick picks up on it when Gatsby comments and agrees with him, “I’d never understood it before. It was full of money – that was the endless charm that rose and fell in it”

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