How The Values of The 1920's was Described in The Great Gatsby The novel, The Great Gatsby, shows the values that people had during the 1920's. It showed that people are greedy and are in it for just the money. The Great Gatsby also shows people trying to win over someone they love. Finally, it shows that people were not trust worthy during the 1920's. These are those values in detail. The person who shows the most greed in the novel is Daisy and her marriage to Tom. Daisy clearly throughout the story did not like Tom because he would always cheat on her with another woman. She stated: "'And if you want to take down any addresses here's my little gold pencil...' She looked around after a moment and told me the girl was 'common but pretty,' and I knew that except for the half hour she'd been alone with Gatsby she wasn't having a good time." (Fitzgerald, 112) …show more content…
In conclusion, Daisy and her marriage with Tom is held be the fact that Tom has a lot of money. Gatsby throughout the whole story is trying to win Daisy's love over. First, Gatsby is so nervous about trying to get her to love him again he made sure that Nick's house looks amazing too. Nick said, "Once more it was pouring and my irregular lawn, well-shaved by Gatsby's gardener, abounded in small muddy swamps and prehistoric marshes" (Fitzgerald, 93). Therefore, Gatsby thought that if Nick's house looked very good his house would look even better and make Daisy like it even more. Gatsby and his love for Daisy makes him nervous and has him doing crazy
The Great Gatsby presents two marriages, the Buchanans and the Wilsons. Both marriages include the typical roles of the husband being the caretaker and the wife staying at home and looking after the house, but the two relationships have more in common. Men at this time period were usually controlling and thought to be superior to the women in relationships. The two marriages in The Great Gatsby generally follow this stereotype. The novel points out both similarities and differences in the two marriages, and there is irony in the resemblance.
The roaring 20’s a fast pace time known by its carless party lifestyle. With so many things happening in this time is was only right a book was written with so many 20’s ideals. The Great Gatsby embodies many ideas and philosophies of the 1920’s. Every single philosophy in this book made a part of the so called roaring 20’s. The most important one in The Great Gatsby is cheating.
Through the empty lives of three characters from this novel Jay Gatsby, Daisy Buchanan, and Tom Buchanan Fitzgerald shows that chasing shallow dreams leads only to misery. When World War I ended, America seemed to promise unlimited financial and social opportunities for anyone willing to work hard for an American Dream. The prosperous acquired wealth only to pursue pleasure. For some, striving for wealth only made them realize that the dream crudely corrupted them. Though the characters in The Great Gatsby seem to like the freedom of the 1920s, their lives exhibit the emptiness that results when wealth and pleasure become a terror they could never imagine.
With tThis in mind Daisy and Gatsby have an affair behind the back of her husband Tom’s back and Gatsby is set on proving to Tom that Daisy loves him. Gatsby has corrupted the American Dream by believing it can be achieved with wealth and glamour, by illegally earning
The Great Gatsby Imagine a world of money hungry men and women, willing to risk it all for a popular title. Well this world was America in the 1920’s. It may be hard to picture, or else it makes perfect sense. Either way, a picturesque scene of this greedy world is displayed in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s most well known book. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald suggests that the American Dream is corrupt, the people who pursue it are selfish, and the pursuit is ultimately useless.
In The Great Gatsby deep obsessions over money and power lead people to a loveless and corrupted world. This may have been one of the most depressing stories that F. Scott FitzGerald wrote in The Great Gatsby because FitzGerald has a deep understanding of lives that can be corrupted by greed with people having a sad and an unfulfilled ending. People can be so lonely, and empty that they can never find what they truly want in life and keep pushing it away and then realizing that it was a bad choice in the end. First of all, Fitzgerald tells that affairs seem to be what corrupts marriages. Tom and Daisy would have come across as a nice, happily married couple.
In the Great Gatsby, privilege comes into play. Privilege in this context means being born with advantages that you did not earn or work for. Some people have to work to get their money but others are born with money which means that they didn’t have to work for their money. Gatsby for example was not born with money. He had to make his own money by selling and dealing drugs and is now a very wealthy man.
The Great Gatsby is an American novel written by Scott Fitzgerald. On the surface, the book revolves around the concept of romance, the love between two individuals. However, the novel incorporates less of a romantic scope and rather focuses on the theme of the American Dream in the 1920s. Fitzgerald depicts the 1920’s as an era of decline in moral values. The strong desire for luxurious pleasure and money ultimately corrupts the American dream which was originally about individualism.
Thesis: Fitzgerald conveys the two groups of old and new money through greediness and their lives growing up. Throughout the book, greediness is conveyed through both Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan. Jay Gatsby is presented at first as a poor farmer who was fascinated with Daisy. Jay Gatsby is shown as new money with the occurring wealth of his drug stores and a bootlegging business. Jay Gatsby’s constant want of being rich never paid off since his relationship with Daisy fails, “I can’t speak about what happened five years ago because I didn’t know Daisy then — and I’ll be damned if I see how you got within a mile of her unless you brought the groceries to the back door.
The characters portat different tiers of greed. At the highest tier, so to say the most greedy, is occupied by Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Tom and Daisy are arguably the most greedy people in the whole novel. They did not have to make their way up the ranks as Tom was born into a rich family and daisy also being born into a wealthy family. Daisy is in love with Gatsby, but as war comes Gatsby has to serve his role in it.
The book, The Great Gatsby, highlights these concepts in many places throughout the book. This is particularly apparent when we are introduced to Jay Gatsby and his lifestyle in the beginning of the book. Many of the parties he held at his home were full of young, carefree spirits which the 1920’s are known for. Though it was told to be a glamorous time, not everything was as great as it was made out to be. It was a corrupt time for of materialistic ideals when looking back and shining a light in a different way.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald embodies the American Dream in a sense where it shows the way that the concept had been twisted by greed, self-satisfaction and near or full obsession. No one in The Great Gatsby ever truly obtains the “American Dream” as it is a fantasy- never having been a dream but more of a name for the failure of so many that try to better their lives but wind up making it worse. Dreams are unattainable and, though for a moment, it might seem one has grasped the dream, no one truly holds onto it. Jay Gatsby takes the American Dream as it is, a warped sense of self-improvement in one's life, and twists it further in a way that better exposes that the “American Dream” is just that – a dream. Greed is a seed of destruction
Greed and love, in most cases go hand in hand. People will sometimes become jealous when a loved one show affection or chooses someone else over themselves. This in many cases can drive a person to horrible or outrageous things this fact is one of the main parts in the novel The Great Gatsby. This can be summed up by one sentence and used as a theme statement and that sentence is “sometimes people will do anything to get what they want. Daisy is a prime example of how sometimes people will do anything to get what they want.
The novel The Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald has many characters that are introduced in the beginning chapters of the novel. Some of the characters were Nick Carraway, Jordan Baker, Jay Gatsby, Tom Buchanan, and lasty Daisy Buchanan. Daisy Buchanan stuck out the most to throughout the novel. Daisy shows to be a victim, a siren, and a temptress. Daisy is a victim to her husband Tom Buchanan.
The Great Gatsby Greed can ruin a person’s life. F. Scott Fitzgerald shows this in his classic novel, The Great Gatsby, a sad love story about the rich title character, Jay Gatsby, and his obsession to win back the love of the now married Daisy Buchanan, his former girlfriend. The extravagant lifestyles of Gatsby and the wealthy socialites who attend his parties lead to lost dreams and wasted lives. These men and women are absorbed by material pursuits. In Jay Gatsby’s case, all the money in the world could not replace what he truly desires, Daisy.