Thursday, May 30, 2019
The Great Gatsby: Gatsbys Illusion Of Himself Essay -- essays research
The Great Gatsby Gatsbys Illusion of Himself     F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby is considered a novel thatembodies America in the 1920s. In it, the narrator, Nick Carroway, helps hisneighbor Jay Gatsby reunite with Daisy Buchanan, with whom he has been in lovewith since 5 years before, during World War I. The affair between the two fails,however, and ends in Gatsby being shot and killed. The reason that this wasinevitable is that Gatsby created a fantasy so thoroughly that he became part ofit, and he fell with it when reality came crashing down.     The basis of both of this is Gatsbys obsession with Daisy and withmeeting her. He did not want to deal with the reality that confronted him uponreturning from the war. Fortunately, he had "an extraordinary gift, a romanticreadiness," and he found in Daisy someone to focus this on. She is perfectionto him, something for which he can strive, so he puts all of his energy intofinding he r again. He uses his inherited money to travel round the country,searching when he runs out, he goes into the drug business, then oil, thenliquor. He clips out articles about Daisy from every newspaper he can find hebuys a huge, romantic house that he hopes will merit her approval. The partiesthat he throws every night in hopes that she will come become almost historied fortheir extravagance and the variety of people that come.     A resu...
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment