Friday, October 25, 2019
Fitzgeralds Great Gatsby and the 20s Essay -- Fitzgerald Great Gatsby
Fitzgerald's Great Gatsby and the 20s After a time of prosperity, the roaring 1920ââ¬â¢s became a decade of social decay and declining moral values. The forces this erosion of ethics can be explained by a variety of theories. However, F. Scott Fitzgerald paints a convincing portrait of waning social virtue in his novel, The Great Gatsby. Fitzgerald portrays the nefarious effects of materialism created by the wealth-driven culture of the time. This was an era where societal values made wealth and material possessions a defining element of oneââ¬â¢s character. The implications of the wealthy mindset and its effects on humanity are at the source of the conflict in The Great Gatsby, offering a glimpse into the despair of the 20ââ¬â¢s. During a time of ââ¬Å"postwar American society, its restless alienation, and its consequent reliance on money as a code for expressing emotions and identityâ⬠(Lewis, 46), Fitzgerald focuses his pen on the inevitable emptiness created by the illusions of wealth and its anomalous connection with love during the 20ââ¬â¢s. In order to convey his theory, Fitzgerald builds a repertory of superficial characters whose existence revolves around material value rather than tangible human qualities. For example, Tom Buchanan, the husband of Daisy, is introduced as having an appealing and rich life. ââ¬Å"Heââ¬â¢d brought down a string of polo ponies from Lake Forest,â⬠Nick comments about Tom. ââ¬Å"It was hard to realize that a man in my own generation was wealthy enough to do that,â⬠(p. 10). Tom is depicted as an enormously wealthy ââ¬Å"national figure,â⬠one with handsome and powerful ââ¬Å"physical accomplishmentsâ⬠(10). But Fitzgeraldââ¬â¢s description does not go much further than that. Tomââ¬â¢s persona is limited to a list of superficial accomplishments none of which resemble any spiritually fulfilling traits. Tom thus represents the end result of a person consumed by wealth, because that is his only defining characteristic. Although we could pity such a character, Fitzgerald makes sure that we donââ¬â¢t feel much of anything towards Tom because he was born into wealth and never had to pursue it. ââ¬Å"His money was divested of dreams before he was even bornâ⬠(Lewis, 51). Since Tomââ¬â¢s lifestyle links intrinsically to his character, nothing he does resembles the passions and desires of a natural human being, rather he is portrayed as a machine or byproduct of his family fortune. Tom la... ... to love, the most powerful of all human feeling. ââ¬Å"The culture of wealth,â⬠writes Marius Bewley, ââ¬Å"represents the romantic enlargement of the possibilities of life on a level at which the material and the spiritual have become inextricably confused,â⬠(Bewley, 37). Gatsby learned this lesson the hard way, giving up his spiritual vision of love and losing it to the emptiness associated with wealth. Fitzgerald realized the confusion in the 1920ââ¬â¢s of a culture based around wealth and used his novel to expose the blandness of wealthy lifestyles in contrast with the human feeling of love. If love were a color it would be red, and if it had a mind of itââ¬â¢s own it would remain far from the gray ââ¬Å"Valley of ashesâ⬠(27) of New York in the 20ââ¬â¢s. Gatsby unfortunately combined those two worlds together and the gray dusted over the red. In the end, Gatsby is murdered, Tom and Daisy continue like zombies, and Nick, disenfranchised, decides to leave altogether. Fitzgerald portrays the essence of emptiness in all the characters touched or consumed by wealth and leaves the reader with a clear message: No sense of fulfillment, specifically regarding love, will result in a life consumed by wealth.
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