The 1920s, known for its promiscuous and adventurous nature, was a time of great exploration that produced a multitude of discoveries in aspects of life such as literature. Classics such as F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, published in 1925 were fundamental pieces of literature that mirrored the themes and overall societal characteristics of that era. Along with the literature that screamed the "roaring twenties" with themes such as partying, drinking, money, and the overall "high life", came classics such as Alan Alexander Milne's tales of Winnie-the- Pooh that seem to greatly contrast the themes and characters of the "roaring twenties". While The Great Gatsby and Winnie-the-Pooh seem to be on two completely different spectrums …show more content…
In the stories of Winnie-the-Pooh, Pooh is initially portrayed as a character who is caring and kind towards his friends. Aside from his apparent behaviors of kindness towards his friends, Pooh has a compulsive tendency towards eating honey. His constant need for honey shows his underlying characteristics of greed and gluttony. Pooh's excessive need for honey is apparent in chapter one when "Pooh, eager to appropriate some honey, takes to the skies on the end of a large ballon, at a later point requiring Christopher Robin to shoot him down when bees attack him" (Milne 33). Pooh is willing to go to the extreme to be able to acquire honey, despite the dangerous …show more content…
Through his direct actions later in the book the audience is able to realize that although Jay Gatsby seems to be in control he has unrealistic expectations and views of life. Jay Gatsby expects that once he rekindles the flame that he once had with Daisy that she will leave Tom Buchanan to be with him. He believes that once he has the wealth that Daisy desires, he'll be able take her away from the life that she had established for herself for many years. Although Daisy agrees to have an affair with Gatsby she ultimately will never leave Tom, a factor that Gatsby refuses to accept. Both Tigger and Jay Gatsby are portrayed as lively characters who have the tendency to have delusional fantasies and aggressive instincts. While Jay Gatsby is unrealistic towards his relationship with Daisy, Tigger is unrealistic about his limitations and the various dilemmas that he
In the novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby tries to find Daisy Buchanan. Daisy, is a women who fell in love with jay, but ended up marrying Tom Buchanan. There are a lot of mixed feelings with who loves who, and a massive indecisiveness throughout the whole book. The way Jay pursued love, was the same was he pursued wealth. Love and wealth play big parts in The Great Gatsby.
The “American Dream” has been around since America was founded, the idea of a “self-made” man. According to Dictionary.com, the American Dream is “the ideals of freedom, equality, and opportunity traditionally held to be available to every American.” The “American Dream” can never be attained by those chasing it, and it is indeed corrupt. The dream is never fulfilled. In Fitzgerald's novel, multiple characters throughout the story are left feeling embittered.
Jay Gatsby is a self-made man who is mysterious at the beginning of the story but vulnerable towards the end. Tom Buchanan, Daisy’s husband who is self-absorbed, makes it his goal to destroy Gatsby’s image and keep
This si when Jay loses his cool. He yells and pins Tom against the wall and makes himself seem like a fool. Described in Chapter 7 Gatsby “looked–and this is said in all contempt for the babbled slander of his garden–as if he had “killed a man.” This showed that Gatsby truly was a bad man and he was just hiding well throughout the whole story. When Daisy noticed this she immediately made up her mind that she wanted to be with
Throughout the Great Gatsby, the theme of idolatry has shown itself in the book as one of the central ideas in the story. As the characters in the book are introduced, we are also introduced to their idols which are shown by the character’s actions. One example is Jay Gatsby, the protagonist of the book. Jay Gatsby is portrayed as a rich millionaire who lives in the West Egg of New York, just right across the one of the idols he worships. That idol is Daisy.
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?’
In the book, Gatsby is very foolish, his actions are unreasonable and unrealistic. “He wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should go to Tom and say: "I never loved you."” (125) Gatsby had expected Daisy to be the same girl she was five years ago, but the truth is that she isn't. Many things had happened to the both of them and he had set up a foolish expectation that Daisy was willing to leave Tom for him. Gatsby’s foolishness originated with Daisy.
The contradicting upbringings of the two is what will inevitably drive them apart. James Gatz was born the son of poor farmers who was determined to be successful, and with the help of a wealthy man (Dan Cody) he was able to learn the manners of the rich. Daisy on the other hand, born into wealth and constantly being surrounded by it, simply has a different perspective of the world that differs from Gatsby's own, one that he simply will never be able to grasp because he never experienced it, no matter how much he pretends to understand. This is evident during Gatsby and Tom's fight over Daisy, “Gatsby leans into his melancholia, adamantly insisting she admit that she ‘never loved’ Tom. The desperation of the melancholia upends itself.
Unfortunately, he had to leave Daisy to go to war. After the war, he was determined to find Daisy but five years later, his feelings are not reciprocated; Daisy toys with him, uses Gatsby to make her husband jealous, and allows Gatsby to take the blame for the murder of her husband’s mistress. The most tragic of the three protagonists studied is Jay Gatsby because he demoralizes himself in a futile attempt at expired love, he has few genuine companions, and he cannot let go of the past. Throughout the novel, the contrast between Gatsby's pure past and corrupt future illustrates the degree to which he changes to impress his love, Daisy.
They each had something happen to them in the past that they could not get over. Jay Gatsby was very in love with Daisy Buchanen when he was younger, but she was with someone else, a wealthy man named Tom. Gatsby could not get over Daisy, he would do anything to get her back. In an attempt to get her to notice him once again, he held these huge, extravagant parties at his house in the hopes that maybe one day she would show up. He went through a lot of effort just for the girl of his dreams.
In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald portrays the themes of love, lust and obsession, through the character of Jay Gatsby, who confuses lust and obsession with love. The character of Jay Gatsby was a wealthy business man, who the author developed as arrogant and tasteless. Gatsby 's love interest, Daisy Buchanan, was a subdued socialite who was married to the dim witted Tom Buchanan. She is the perfect example of how women of her level of society were supposed to act in her day. The circumstances surrounding Gatsby and Daisy 's relationship kept them eternally apart.
F. Scott Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway are among the most prominent exponents of literature of the twentieth century. Forming part of the Lost Generation, these authors not only develop similar themes throughout their works, but heavily influenced each other. The Great Gatsby being Fitzgerald’s magnum opus, serves as a prime illustration of the staples of contemporary literature. In the novel The Great Gatsby by Fitzgerald, the author depicts himself through a character, Nick Carraway, conforming to other self depiction common in the Lost Generation, such as Hemingway in the Nick Adams stories. Nick Carraway and Nick Adams represent Fitzgerald and Hemingway, both serving as apertures into Fitzgerald’s and Hemingway’s view of the world.
In the book The Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald portrays and image of love versus infatuation. The relationships between the characters shows the struggle of an emotional connection in a world driven by societal pressures and money. Gatsby’s and Daisy’s relationship with each other is intertwined with each other’s love and lust, and is complicated with their other relationships, such as Daisy’s and Tom’s marriage. Gatsby is the “fool” in love throughout this whole endeavor and his week with Daisy, because of his constant search for love to fill the void in his life that no amount of success can. Gatsby’s complete infatuation with Daisy started out with them meeting five years back, and surfaced into a love affair.
“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.
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.