Significance Of The Lost Generation In The Great Gatsby

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November 11, 1918, the great war had come to an end, leaving the men who joined the war as young as 18 without jobs. The constant fear of gas attacks, gunfire, fighting on the frontline, and death left these men mentally handicapped and deprived of security. The men had set everything aside before they left for war and returned with nothing but a shell-shocked mind. This is the main reason that the generation who fought in the war are known as “The Lost Generation.” A generation that was forged through their suffering in war and out of touch with humanity was depicted by F. Scott Fitzgerald, in The Great Gatsby. He demonstrates the idea of the hollowness of wealth in that time period. These men needed to find a release for their trauma which was ultimately the search for wealth and happiness.
As soldiers recovered from gruesome trench warfare, they began showing signs of an …show more content…

after making his millions he tirelessly longed for the return of his true love, Daisy Buchanan. He threw party after party knowing that this is all the people of his generation wanted to do to recover from the mental torture of war. Finally with the help of his old sport, Nick Carraway. He got to reunite with Daisy and rekindle their passionate love for one another this love was not the love Gatsby had in mind due to his fantasy of true love being his actual goal over his love with Daisy. Fitzgerald shows the reader the idea of an escape for veterans and idealising a situation the is impossible.
Gatsby demonstrates how intense the desire for money was among returned soldiers. His morals were depleted and his only aspiration was to attain money no matter what he has to do to aquire it. This was common among soldiers as they thought that money would bring them happiness and help them forget about the dreadfulness of war, but it never would fully satisfy

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