What do u think of when you see or hear the word orange? The fruit? Or just the color in general? What do you think to be orange means? I will presenting the trait competitive and it will show my competitiveness in football. A trait that describes me is competitive which means playing against other people and trying to win the battle. I use this trait in sports, mostly in football. It proves that I fight to win or work harder to be better than the other person or team. I showed competitiveness in a football game last season against Maize. We worked hard through the whole game and kept the game close. Later on, I ended up scoring a touchdown to tie the game in the 4th quarter. We ended up losing the game but I showed competitiveness along with my team and we all played our hardest. The reader learned what trait described me and how it was used in my life. I believe trait has gotten better …show more content…
Scott Fitzgerald, the character of Jay Gatsby is described as a fabulously wealthy young man. When gold is heard what’s the first thing that comes to mind? Shiney Maybe? Valuable? Or Worth lots of money? The traits that describe Gatsby are Caring and Loyal. They will show how he cared about Daisy and how loyal he was to her. One of the traits that describes Gatsby is caring. He shows this trait everywhere throughout the book. In the book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald Nick says, “He had waited five years and bought and mansion where he dispensed starlight to casual moths” (63). This proves that he still cared about Daisy even if he has went away for war for 5 years. How he shows this trait throughout the book is how he treats Daisy. He loves her and treats her right. In the Great Gatsby by F.Scott Fitzgerald Nick says, “His hand took hold of hers, and she said something low in his ear as he turned toward her with a rush of motion” (76). This proves he truly loved Daisy since the first day met her and continues to love her and treat her
In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald displays some of the characters in the book being prosperous through the color gold. The color gold symbolizes prosperous, because in The Great Gatsby the color gold serves as wealth and as success. Fitzgerald depicts the color gold as wealth through what the characters in The Great Gatsby have bought, mainly the rich characters in The Great Gatsby. Fitzgerald writes of Nick describing Gatsby’s food at Gatsby’s party in
He is kind and caring for his friends. His observant side makes the reader curious as to what his true motives are. "At first, Gatsby is a mystery to Nick. He spends too ostentatiously and entertains too lavishly. Besides giving parties, Gatsby wears pinks suits, drives yellow cars, and is in business with the man who fixed the World Series" (Johnson 19).
The Great Gatsby Nick Carraway seems like a genuine nice gentleman. Nick sees Gatsby as an inspiration and a good guy, but Gatsby is not the guy he claims to be. He is more mysterious and as if he is hiding something. As the story progresses, we meet Tom Buchanan who I am not very fond of. He is very rude, snobby, and aggressive.
The Great Gatsby and The American Dream “Whenever you feel like criticizing any one,” he told me, “just remember that all the people in this world haven't had the advantages that you've had.” -Fitzgerald, F. Scott The Great Gatsby. This quote from the book, The Great Gatsby relates to the American Dream in a powerful way.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is an appropriate title for the novel because Gatsby himself is great. He is great because he is able to fool everyone that he is and always has been a person of high social and economical class, he is great because he isn’t like Tom and Daisy, he isn’t as careless. Remember you don’t have to be good to be great. And as the critic Matthew J. Broccoli notes, Gatsby “is truly great by virtue of his capacity to commit himself to his aspirations.” (Bruccoli 22)
Firstly, being selfless and accommodating to others needs and wants is not something that the society in this time period can be proud of. Daisy, Tom and Gatsby develop the trait of selfishness in many ways throughout the novel. Daisy Buchanan is a wealthy woman who lives in the East egg and is married to Tom Buchanan. Tom, Daisy, Gatsby, Jordan and Nick all go to town when Tom and Gatsby break into an argument because Tom finds out that Gatsby and Daisy are having an affair. Gatsby tells Tom the truth about Daisy and himself because Tom bombards him with questions when he says, “’She never loves you, do you hear?’
Fitzgerald attempts to make Gatsby appear as a compassionate and humble man who cares for everyone but fails at doing so by showing his many flaws and actions that go against the very idea of him being a compassionate man. At first, Gatsby appears to be perhaps the only compassionate man in the book and maybe even comparable to Christ. You see him opening his home to everyone, and taking people in and being kind hearted to everyone he encounters but later the reader begins to discover that everything Gatsby does, has an ulterior motive. For example, his kindness to Nick first appears to be just him being kind to his neighbour, however the reader later realises that the only purpose in Gatsby’s kindness towards Nick was to get him to assist him come in to contact with Daisy and be reintroduced to her. “I’m going to make a big request of you to-day” (Fitzgerald 52).
In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald portrays love, obsession, and objectification through the characters Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan. Some might say their love was true and Gatsby’s feelings for her was pure affection, while others say that he objectifies and is obsessed with her. Perhaps Gatsby confuses lust and obsession with love, and throughout the novel, he is determined to win his old love back. At the end of the novel, Gatsby is met with an untimely death and never got to be with Daisy. The reader is left to determined if Gatsby’s and Daisy’s love was pure and real, or just wasn’t meant to be.
Gatsby’s dreams and aspirations in life are rather interesting and amazing as he goes about his life in the book. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald helps highlight the social, moral, and political issue that were very present during the 1920’s and today. Gatsby is the focus of the book as before the book began, he was an ex-soldier who came to wealth by some rather illegal ways. Daisy a married woman is his person of interest, who was his ex-lover 5 years before the book started. Gatsby’s actions, and words demonstrate a clear obsession with Daisy that seems to have no end.
Gatsby is an ample example of success in the novel. The American dream in the 1920s consisted strictly of success. Gatsby is seen as a member of the resourceful, athletic, restless Americans; striving to make the nation more productive as a whole. The problem is, Nick sees the American nation as something different. He sees it beaten down like Mr. Wilson, or rich and careless like Tom.
In the story The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the majority of the characters are either dishonest, chasing hollow dreams, or plain ignorant. Fitzgerald flaunts the flaws of these characters regularly. Tom Buchanan is a constant example of dishonesty, due to his reoccurring affair with Myrtle Wilson. Although she does not believe it true, Daisy is one of the most ignorant characters.
Jay 's Obsession in The Great Gatsby There is a fine line between love and lust. If love is only a will to possess, it is not love. To love someone is to hold them dear to one 's heart. In The Great Gatsby, the characters, Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan are said to be in love, but in reality, this seems to be a misconception.
“And what's more, I love Daisy too. Once in a while I go off on a spree and make a fool of myself, but I always come back, and in my heart I love her all the time” (Fitzgerald 138). These words, spoken by Tom Buchanan in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel The Great Gatsby, exemplify the personality traits that are omnipresent throughout the novel. Tom is Daisy Buchanan’s husband whom she marries after her first love, Jay Gatsby, leaves for the war.
The Great Gatsby, written by Scott Fitzgerald, features the “American dream”. This dream comes with the fake perception of a person receiving everything they could only hope for. Scott’s romanticism plays as a major influence in his writings and his idea of reaching his own American dream. Scott Fitzgerald’s image of the good life is portrayed the through his writings of binging and a better self-image, but can he interpret the difference between fantasy and his own life realities? .
As American business man, Richard M. Devos, once said, “Money cannot buy peace of mind. It cannot heal ruptured relationships, or build meaning into a life that has none.” In the novel, The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott, Fitzgerald, Daisy, an elite socialite, is blinded by dollar signs and makes multiple decisions based on class, ultimately leading to the destruction of those who she claims to love, and without a doubt love and idolize her. Jay Gatsby has been in love with Daisy for five years, and supposedly she is with him, but she’s too impatient to wait for Gatsby while he is at war and decides to marry an arrogant, racist, and rude former college football star, Tom Buchanan, for money. Daisy is a self-absorbed, vacuous socialite whose decisions lead to the destruction of Gatsby.