Moral Values In The Great Gatsby

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The book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald was published in 1925. The 1920s were a time of great economic success. The great economic success lead to a booming social experience. Different kinds of music were coming out, along with dance clubs and partying society. Fashion also changed during this time period, especially for women. Most young women had bobbed hair and short skirts. They also drank and smoked on a regular basis. Prohibition was going on during this time period. People ran speakeasies and illegally sold alcohol at drugstores. Most people during this time had looser morals (The Roaring Twenties). These loose morals were depicted in several different characters in the book The Great Gatsby. Daisy Buchanan is one of these …show more content…

Daisy made several unforgivable mistakes, and yet, I still liked her and was rooting for her to have a happy ending in the end. A few years ago, I figured out why I could relate with her so much. I was doing a family tree project where we had to trace our roots back 5 generations. I found out that I had a great grandmother named Pam, a great great grandmother named Daisy, and a great great grandfather named Thomas. I thought that this was interesting, because Tom and Daisy had a child together that they called Pammy. I looked into my family’s past and found out that they were very wealthy people that also lived in New York. It took a lot of digging to find out that My great great grandparents’ last name was Buchanan. I thought that the similarities between my ancestors and the characters in the book were too exact to just be a coincidence. I asked my mother and it turns out that Daisy and Tom Buchanan from the book, were my great great grandparents. I knew while reading the book that I had a connection with some of the character, but I never thought that I would actually have a connection with them in real

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