Daisy Buchanan In The Great Gatsby

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In the novel The Great Gatsby, the author, F. Scott Fitzgerald creates, in the reader’s mind, an image of a woman at the roaring 1920s in Daisy’s character, through Nick. Daisy Buchanan is the apex of sociability. Daisy’s previous life in Louisville has conditioned her to a particular lifestyle, which Tom, her husband, is able to provide her. She captivates men, especially Gatsby, with her delicate nature and sultry voice. F. Scott Fitzgerald makes the reader frustrated with Gatsby’s attraction towards Daisy, who is glamorous but shallow and not worth his time and effort. He shows this by stylistically choosing to use similes, and repeated diction. One way that Fitzgerald makes his reader frustrated with Gatsby’s attraction to Daisy, which is beautiful but superficial, is by using Simile. For instance, when the Buchanans, …show more content…

Fitzgerald describes both Daisy and Jordan as “silver idols”, both are very high in significance and the fact that they looked like "silver idols" makes them a focal point in the room. At that period of time, for woman, nothing was more important than beauty, money and power, some of the main reasons why Gatsby was attracted to Daisy, but what Gatsby did not see was Daisy’s superficiality behind all that glamour. Fitzgerald describes Daisy as the woman from the 1920s who is glamorous, giving credits not only for her charm and beauty but also for her social class and rank. Daisy is appealed as a lovely women to Gatsby, but little did he know what her true colors were. By far Fitzgerald had shown no other women in the novel, The Great Gatsby, as beautiful and attractive as Daisy. Furthermore, Fitzgerald makes the reader even more frustrated by Gatsby’s denial of Daisy’s true colors; for

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