AQA English Literature A-level - The Great Gatsby PDF

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AQA

F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The Great Gatsby American literature 20th-century novels literature analysis

Summary

This document provides a summary of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby." The overview discusses the novel's key themes, including the Roaring Twenties, the American Dream, and the complexities of love and relationships.

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AQA English Literature A-level The Great Gatsby Overview of Text and Key Scenes This work by PMT Education is licensed under https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu-cc CC BY-NC-ND 4.0...

AQA English Literature A-level The Great Gatsby Overview of Text and Key Scenes This work by PMT Education is licensed under https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu-cc CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Overview Written by the American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1925, The Great Gatsby is one of the greatest American novels of the twentieth century and arguably Fitzgerald’s seminal text. It is set in the summer of 1922 in New York. It has 9 chapters and is framed by Nick Carraway, an unreliable narrator. The story follows Nick’s memories of Jay Gatsby, a man who still loves Daisy Buchanan, now a married woman. Gatsby tries to impress Daisy, who lives across the bay from him, with his extravagant and lavish parties. But Gatsby’s hopes and dreams of winning Daisy are crumbled when he faces her husband, the cruel Tom Buchanan. The Great Gatsby explores the Roaring Twenties, The American Dream, class and grapples with the past and future. In doing so, it captures the spirit, excitement, and violence of the era Fitzgerald named ‘The Jazz Age’. Indeed, through the symbols of the green light, the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg, the valley of ashes, the friction between the east and west and Gatsby’s mansion, The Great Gatsby is a classic story of hope and disillusion. Genre and Structure Fitzgerald was writing in the Modernist period where technological change was rapid and this meant society was moving towards modernity. But throughout, Fitzgerald’s poetic language suggests his inspiration from the Romantic age. Some critics argue that Fitzgerald was influenced by the English Romantic poet, John Keats. In his ‘Ode to a Nightingale’, Keats’s speaker is torn between the enchanting nature of death and the uncertainty of life. Perhaps Fitzgerald alludes to this through Daisy. When Daisy sees a nightingale in The Great Gatsby, she says “It’s romantic, isn’t it, Tom?”. Perhaps Daisy is enchanted by its poetic symbol. This moment ends with the “shrill” of the telephone. This shows how modernity kills the beauty of nature, it cuts it off and thus, the conflict between science and nature arises. Fitzgerald was also influenced by the great Modernist poet, T. S. Eliot (he called himself a “worshipper” of Eliot’s poetry. We see the influence of Eliot’s seminal poem ‘The Waste Land’ in the novel. The Valley of Ashes alludes to this wasteland and both writers criticise modernity and its ruin of nature. The Great Gatsby is a novel about America in the 1920s. Many readers consider The Great Gatsby as a 20th-century tragedy. If we can understand what a classical tragedy entails, then we can extrapolate this into its modern equivalent. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc The Great Gatsby is sometimes considered a Realist novel, in its realistic depiction of the world a banknotes Fitzgerald sets his novel in a New York that readers recognise: landmarks such as the Plaza Hotel and Central Park are familiar to readers. However, Fitzgerald alters Great Neck and Manhasset Neck to East and West Eggs. The large landfill site at Flushing is renamed “the valley of ashes”. Nonetheless, Fitzgerald’s use of factual figures and historical dates, like the 1919 World Series, places the novel under the genre of realism. The exploration of the themes of sex and adultery also emphasise the novel’s realism. The novel is also considered a social satire. Fitzgerald’s use of irony, exaggeration and ridicule mocks and exposes the hedonism of 1920s America. Think about Nick’s long list of Gatsby’s guests: none of them knew who Gatsby really was and the readers didn’t know who they were. Even though most social satire is superficial, Fitzgerald exposes the tragic human tendency to be fallible. The readers see this through Myrtle Wilson’s attempt to transcend the status quo but fate decrees she must die. With her death, Gatsby and George Wilson die too. Only those of the lower class die in this novel. Fitzgerald demonstrates how the lower classes are the victims of 1920s American society. Beneath all the extravagance is a deep callousness and shallowness. The readers understand the greatness of Gatsby through the unreliable voice of Nick Carraway. Nick’s voice is not the same as Fitzgerald’s but sometimes Nick assumes the role of Fitzgerald’s mouthpiece. Interestingly, Fitzgerald doesn’t use an omniscient narrator, especially since Nick doesn’t know all the facts. And yet, the reader is expected to believe Nick. Nick’s subjective point of view places Gatsby on a pedestal and the real victim of the novel. Nick is dishonest about his own shortcomings: he dismisses his affairs with other women and his alcohol use. He doesn’t tell the reader the truth about Gatsby’s past until chapter six. Thus, in many ways, Nick outlines Gatsby through his retrospective viewpoint and leaves the reader to colour him in. Gatsby’s backstory and tragedy are mainly told by Nick but it is also narrated by the gossiping party guests, Jordan Baker and Meyer Wolfsheim. This means that the novel is not in the chronological order of Gatsby’s life but the chronological order of Nick’s memories. Here is a diagram of the novel’s structure. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Context Jazz Age: The inter-war period was known as The Roaring Twenties, the Golden Years, and Fitzgerald’s term ‘the Jazz Age. The war put pressure on the American industries. This meant that more jobs were created and more employment resulted in economic booms. 1920s America: The decade of consumption. With all the money that the economic booms, consumption and consumerism were born. Brands and companies started to advertise more and people were influenced by advertisements. High consumption meant that whilst the American economy was healthy, it trapped individuals in debt. Illegal activities: Because of the 1919 Prohibition Act, many people acquired their wealth through bootlegging (gangsters sold alcohol in secret bars called ‘speakeasies’ for a great profit). People also gambled and there was a lot of violence and mafia involvement. Immigration: In 1924, the Immigration Act was passed. This restricted the number of southern and eastern Europeans moving to the USA. It also prohibited any Asian to come to the US. There was a lot of prejudice against ethnic minorities: think about Wolfsheim and the treatment of African Americans in the novel. Economic booms: America’s West coast was known for hard, physical work and the East coast was reputed for its fast living, financial gain and corrupt businessmen. During the American ‘Gold Rush’ of the 19th century, Americans moved West in search of fortune. But after WW1 people moved east to profit from the post-war banking boom. Key Themes The Roaring Twenties: After the First World War, America and the West, in general, found an economic boom. With all this excess money, the Roaring Twenties were born: lavish parties, glamorous fashion, and loads of liquor (even with the Prohibition Act of 1919). Whilst this decade was known for its optimism and extravagance, Fitzgerald highlights the shallowness that dictated this hedonism. The American Dream: Since the time of the first settlers, America has always been the ‘land of opportunity This Dream paints the sentiment that through hard work, one can climb the social ladder and be respected and successful. Fitzgerald shows us that it’s not that simple. Whilst the money aspect of the American Dream was achievable by Gatsby, his American Dream of winning back Daisy costs him his life. Gatsby represents the corrupted Dream (in its callous attitude towards the lower classes) and the uncorrupted Dream of pure love and earnest hope. Money and Class: Money dictates class. In Fitzgerald’s novel, there are three real classes but the third one is subtle and is largely ignored. We have the ‘Old Money’: those like Tom and Daisy Buchanan, Jordan Baker and Nick Carraway. The ‘Old Money’ largely live in the East Egg. We also have the ‘New Money’: Gatsby. Whilst Nick is ‘Old Money’, he lives in the West Egg with Gatsby. The third class is arguably the ‘No Money’: George and Myrtle Wilson can be considered of this class. Myrtle tries to escape this class through her affair with Tom Buchanan, but this only gets her killed. George hopes to move West to escape this class but his dream dies with Myrtle. Past, Present and Future: Time is a big theme in this novel. Gatsby tries to “repeat the past” by winning Daisy back but he shatters against Tom’s “cruel body”. Gatsby’s dream https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc is every man’s dream. His “romantic readiness” is admirable as he seeks the pure Dream of love. In doing so, he dismisses the present and obliterates the future. Nick recognises that Gatsby is stuck in the past. See below for the symbol of the clock. Religion and Morality: All the characters search for new values and beliefs. Nick compares Gatsby to the “son of God” but Gatsby’s world revolves around Daisy. She becomes his religion as he worships her. The readers can also see how George Wilson mistakes the billboard of the eyes of T. J. Eckleburg (see below for its symbol), as God. Religion has been replaced by consumerism and the pursuit of pleasure. In this way, morality is secondary and is corrupted. We see the seven deadly sins throughout the novel and infidelity is never condemned correctly. Gender and Sexuality: The 1920s saw the redefinition of stereotypical gender roles. The Jazz Age gave birth to the flappers and this meant women were no longer confined to the private sphere. Whilst this is great, Tom proves that misogyny is still present in 1920s America and readers recognise that the novel is set in a patriarchal society. Some critics have argued that Jordan Baker is lesbian because of her subversive role as a woman. This contrasts greatly with Myrtle who conforms to ideas of femininity and female sexuality to climb the social ladder. Myrtle proves that sexuality is connected to autonomy and agency to change one’s, social class. But Tom also highlights that sexuality is connected with power and control. He uses his sexuality to get whatever he wants. There are also many hints throughout the novel that Nick may be gay. Love and Relationships: There is only one true love in the novel, and it is Gatsby’s love for Daisy. But it is an idealised, unconditional love that is shattered by the material love that the other characters possess. Every relationship ends in conflict and the end, Nick leaves unscathed as he never really cared for Jordan. Fitzgerald paints relationships and friendships as inherently shallow. Interestingly, the traditional nuclear family dynamic is non-existent in the novel. Instead, readers are presented with hedonistic pursuits of pleasure that corrupt love and relationships. Appearances and Reality: Not all is what it seems. Gatsby’s rise to fame is because of the myth that he created of himself. This myth is kept alive by the rumours that surround him. Gatsby is an illusion, and even readers are enchanted by him because of this. Perhaps the biggest critique of appearances comes with the idea of “advertisements”. Daisy says that Gatsby reminds her of an advertisement and George worships the eyes of T. J. Eckleburg. Even the books in Gatsby’s library show the conflict between appearances and reality. Key Symbols The Green Light: This is the greatest symbol of hope. Gatsby’s dreams are concentrated in this light and the general colour of green. Green becomes a symbol for money and it colours the way Gatsby sees the world around him. Perhaps Gatsby’s love for Daisy isn’t pure because he likens her to the American Dream. Nonetheless, Gatsby’s idea of Daisy is romanticised. East and West: Nick describes the novel as a “story of the West”. The conflict between the East and the West kills Gatsby. It is the “foul dust [that] floated in the wake of his https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc dreams”. The Great Gatsby is a love story that is coloured by class; the East and the West Eggs symbolise this class struggle. Valley of Ashes: It is an area in between New York City and the West Egg. It symbolises the corruption of the Jazz Age. It houses the ‘no money’ class that the Wilsons belong to. Eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg: For Nick and George, the eyes of T. J. Eckleburg watches over the corruption of the Roaring Twenties. But George also imposes the idea of God to the eyes. He believes that the advertisement must be God as it sees the corruption and the hedonism of society. Clocks: The “defunct mantelpiece clock” symbolises time. When Gatsby leans too hard on the clock, it almost drops before he catches it. Gatsby sees the clock as a crutch. He relies on time to “repeat the past”. It also symbolises the destruction of time. Everyone in the novel and the readers believe that Gatsby’s time is up. He cannot win back Daisy because she changed too much. But Gatsby is the only one who holds on to his dream. Cars: They symbolise modernity, status and destruction. Without cars, it would be very difficult to imagine the story in the 20th century. The cars show progression in civilisation and they highlight modernity. But only Gatbsy, Tom and Jordan own a car. This suggests that cars are synonymous with status. For Gatsby, his car completes his image of the self-made man. Tom uses his car to assert his social superiority over everyone else. But Jordan uses her car to highlight the subversion of femininity. However, cars also symbolise destruction. It is the car that kills Myrtle and in turn, everyone else’s dreams die. Characters Jay Gatsby: Nick Carraway’s rich neighbour and Daisy Buchanan’s former love interest. He is known for his lavish lifestyle in a mansion on Long Island’s West Egg. He is a self-made ‘new money’ man (his birth name was James Gatz) through boot-legging at the time of the Prohibition Act of 1919. He represents the tragic hero/ lover of the Jazz Age. Nick Carraway: the unreliable narrator that retells the story of Jay Gatsby even though he describes himself as “one of the few honest people that [he has] ever known." He is Daisy Buchanan’s cousin but criticises her lifestyle and her husband’s lifestyle by exposing their callousness. He represents the romantic critic of 1920s America. Daisy Buchanan: the love of Jay Gatsby’s life, Nick Carraway’s cousin and Tom Buchanan’s wife. She is an ephemeral woman who values material and superficial objects and lets down Jay Gatsby by staying loyal to her disloyal husband. She hopes her daughter grows up to be a “beautiful little fool”. She isn’t so horrible - it’s just that the greed of society has corrupted her and made her callous. She exposes the lust for money in 1920s America. Jordan Baker: the love interest of Nick Carraway. But he misjudges her and calls her “incurably dishonest” for cheating in golf. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Tom Buchanan: the husband of Daisy Buchanan and the antagonist of the story as he opposes Jay Gatsby. His ‘old money’ status barely veils that he is a misogynistic, racist, self-serving and violent monster of a man. Myrtle Wilson: the wife of George Wilson and Tom Buchanan’s mistress. She desperately tries to seek a better life and in doing so she faces the brutal violence of her husband, the indifference of Tom Buchanan and the cold metal of Jay Gatsby’s car. She represents the lower class that fails to climb the social ladder and are exploited without compensation. George Wilson: the husband of Myrtle Wilson. He owns a garage in the Valley of Ashes. He loves his wife but turns violent towards her after learning of her affair. This drives him on edge and he becomes mentally unstable after her death. Meyer Wolfsheim: the friend and business partner of Jay Gatsby. He is a gambler that makes his name in organised crime by fixing the 1919 World Series. Owl Eyes: a drunken man that Nick encounters in Gatsby’s library that is filled with real books rather than cardboard in the shape of books like he thought it would be. Ewing Klipspringer: a man who visits the Gasby mansion very frequently but he leeches off Gatsby’s money and generosity. After Gatsby dies, he only cares about the pair of sneakers he left behind. He doesn’t attend Gatsby’s funeral. Dan Cody: the mentor and best friend of Jay Gatsby. Cody left Gatsby twenty-five thousand dollars after he died but Gatsby couldn’t receive it because of a legal complication. Henry Gatz: the father of Jay Gatsby. He believes his son was destined for great things. Pammy Buchanan: the young daughter of Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Michaelis: a Greek man who owns a coffee shop near George Wilson’s garage. Catherine: Myrtle’s sister who knows about Myrtle’s affair with Tom Buchanan. Chapter Summary Chapter 1 1. Nick Carraway is the novel’s narrator and the supposed ‘author’ who retells the course of events that had taken place more than a year ago. This means that Nick is relying on his memory of the events when relaying the story. 2. He believes that Gatsby had a “gorgeous” personality and an “extraordinary gift for hope” Gatsby, Nick tells the reader, is a victim of the “foul dust” that “preyed on” him and corrupted his dreams. 3. The story starts when in the summer of 1922, Nick, a recent Yale graduate that has just finished his military service, moves to New York in hopes to find a taste of excitement and becoming a bond salesman. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc 4. Nick rents a small house in West Egg, a Long Island suburb across a bay from East Egg. He tells the narrator that despite identical shapes and sizes, both West and East Egg communities differ greatly in every way. The East Egg is where people lived if they had the social connections and cultural refinement that generational ‘old money’ wealth offers. The West Egg is where the ‘new money’ families reside and they possess “garish” displays of wealth that ‘old money’ families find distasteful. 5. Nick’s home is right next door to Gatsby’s mansion which is covered in ivy to give the aesthetic of ‘old money’ homes. It is surrounded by forty acres of lawns and gardens. This makes Nick’s home look like an “eye-sore” compared to it. 6. Nick visits his cousin Daisy Buchanan and her family for dinner in East Egg. There he meets Tom Buchanan who greets him with brutish force, wearing his riding clothes, and talks condescendingly at him. He also meets Jordan Baker, a young professional golfer who is both beautiful but seems constantly bored with her surroundings. 7. Tom attempts to interest his guests in a book called The Rise of the Colored Empires by a man named Goddard. The book is deeply racist and embraces white-supremacist attitudes that Tom seems to adhere to. 8. Shortly after, Tom gets a phone call and leaves the room and Daisy follows him. Jordan tells Nick that the call is from Tom’s mistress. They continue to have dinner, albeit awkwardly. When he leaves, Daisy and Tom suggest he should pursue a romance with Jordan since the rumours of his supposed engagement were false. 9. When he arrives home, Nick finds Gatsby alone on his lawn staring at the Long Island Sound. He thinks of calling out to him but stops himself as Gatsby extends his arms out towards the far side of the water. When Nick follows Gatsby’s gaze he only finds a tiny green light blinking at the end of the dock. Chapter 2 1. Nick describes the “wasteland” called the Valley of Ashes between West Egg and New York City whether the ashes of the city are dumped. He tells the reader that ashes cover everything, even the men who live there. 2. Above the Valley of Ashes, stare out two huge spectacled eyes from a billboard for an eye doctor’s defunct practice. They are the all-seeing, unblinking eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg that watch over everything in the Valley of Ashes. 3. One day, Tom and Nick ride a train from Long Island into the city but Tom gets off at a stop in the Valley of Ashes and tells Nick to come along. Tom takes Nick to George Wilson’s auto garage. Nick soon learns that Tom’s mistress is Wilson’s wife, Myrtle. 4. Whilst George is handsome, he appears beaten down and lifeless. However, Myrtle strikes Nick as vibrant and oddly sensuous despite her stocky figure. 5. Tom talks with Wilson about selling a car. But when Wison goes to get some chairs, Tom whispers to Myrtle to meet them shortly at the train station. Tom, Nick and Myrtle go to the https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Morningside Heights apartment Tom keeps in New York City to conduct his affair. Catherine shows up and so does another couple. 6. The topic of conversation eventually turns to Gatsby. Catherine says Gatsby is a relative of the German emperor, Kaiser Wilhelm. Everyone agrees that Gatsby has an enigmatic background. 7. The more Myrtle drinks, the more talkative she gets. She starts talking about her life, her marriage and her first meeting with Tom. Soon she talks about Tom’s marriage. Tom warns her about mentioning Daisy’s name. She repeats Daisy’s name as a way to tease Tom and he punches her nose, breaking it. 8. The party ends and Nick takes the train home alone. Chapter 3 1. Every Saturday night, Gatsby throws parties at his mansion. Nick is finally invited one day and joins the festivities. But he feels out of place as the party is filled with people who haven’t been invited. 2. The main topic of conversation at the party is rumours about Gatsby. Some say he’s a German spy, an Oxford graduate and someone claims that Gatsby once killed a man. 3. Nick runs into Jordan Baker at the party. Suddenly, he sees all the amazing luxuries of the party. Gatsby’s party is beautiful. The guests gape at his Rolls-Royce, his swimming pool, his beach, crates of imported fresh fruit, the cornucopia of food and the live orchestra playing under the stars. The liquor flows freely and appears endless. 4. Nick and Jordan decide to find their mysterious host but no one seems to know where he is. This suggests that they don’t even know who Gatsby is. Nick and Jordan end up wandering into Gatsby’s library in search of him. They meet a short, drunken man who Nick refers to as Owl Eyes because of his glasses. Owl Eyes is intrigued by the vastness and “realism” of Gatsby’s unread book collection. 5. Later, Nick and Jordan sit outside watching the party. Nick strikes up a conversation with the man sitting beside him. Turns out the man thinks Nick looks familiar and they might have crossed paths during World War I. The man introduces himself - it’s Jay Gatsby. 6. Nick finds Gatsby’s speech elaborate and formal. Gatsby has a habit of calling everyone “old sport” Nick tells the reader that Gatsby has a dazzling smile “with a quality of eternal reassurance”. Nick finds Gatsby interesting as he remains apart from the party, deriving pleasure from watching others have fun. 7. It’s almost two in the morning and the butler tells Jordan that Gatsby wants to meet her. She returns a while later telling Nick that she just heard the “the most amazing” story. 8. After saying goodbye to Gatsby, Nick leaves the party. As he walks home, he sees a crowd around a car accident. Drunken Owl Eyes drove his car into a ditch. With no luck getting it out, Owl Eyes gives up and walks away, leaving the car behind. 9. Nick tries to prove to the reader that he does more than just attend parties. He goes to work every day in the city and casually dates women. He has had a brief relationship with a woman from New Jersey and now he is dating Jordan Baker. 10. Although he’s attracted to her, Nick dislikes Jordan. He finds her dishonest and she even cheats at golf. Nick then goes on to say that he is one of the only honest people he’s ever known. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Chapter 4 1. Nick observes some drunken women on Gatsby’s lawn gossiping about Gatsby’s mysterious identity. He then starts to list out everyone who went to the party that summer, none of whom knew anything about their host. 2. Nick narrates to the reader about the time he accompanied Gatsby on a trip into the city for lunch. They ride to the city in Gatsby’s monstrous cream-coloured car. While he drives, Gatsby tells Nick about his past. He tells him that he was the son of wealthy parents from the “Midwest” town of San Francisco. Apparently, Gatsby graduated from Oxford, “a family tradition”, was a noted jewel collector in many European cities and a decorated hero in the war. Noticing Nick’s doubtful glances, he shows Nick a war medal and a photo of him playing cricket in Oxford. Gatsby then tells Nick to expect to hear a very sad story about him later in the afternoon. When Gatsby exceeds the speed limit, the policeman apologises and lets him go because Gatsby shows him a white card. 3. For lunch, they meet Meyer Wolfsheim, Gatsby’s business partner. He tells Nick that Gatsby is a man of “fine breeding” who would “never so much look at a friend’s wife”. Nick gets the impression that Wolfshiem is a shady character with underground business connections. Gatsby tells Nick that Wolfsheim is the man behind fixing the 1919 World Series. This makes Nick think that Gatsby might be involved in organised crime. 4. On the way out of the restaurant, Nick sees Tom and introduces him to Gatsby. Gatsby appears embarrassed and leaves the scene without saying goodbye. 5. After lunch, Nick meets Jordan at the Plaza Hotel. She tells him Gatsby’s story. As a young man, Gatsby had a passionate romance with Daisy Fay, now Daisy Buchanan. During the war, when Daisy was not yet twenty, Gatsby met her while he was stationed in Louisville as a Lieutenant and the two of them fell in love. 6. Her family prevented Daisy from leaving and marrying Gatsby, and one year later she married Tom Buchanan, a wealthy man from Chicago who gave her a string of pearls worth $350,000 and a three-month honeymoon to the South Seas. Daisy drank herself into numbness the night before her wedding after she received a letter from Gatsby. Daisy has apparently remained faithful to her husband throughout their marriage, but Tom did not.He was quick to cheat on Daisy early in their marriage. 7. Jordan finishes the story later in Central Park. She says Gatsby never fell out of love with Daisy and bought his great mansion in West Egg to be across the bay from her. He had hoped that the magnificent house would impress her and win back her love. Nick realizes that the green light he saw Gatsby gazing at sits at the end of Daisy's dock. 8. Finally, Jordan adds that Gatsby has requested that Nick invite Daisy over to his house for tea. Then Gatsby will show up so that Daisy will have to see him, even if, as Gatsby fears, she doesn't want to. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Chapter 5 1. That night, Nick comes from the city after a date with Jordan. He finds Gatsby nervous on his front lawn as he asks if Nick would like to take a swim in his front pool. Nick reassures Gatsby that he would help set up the meeting between Daisy and Gatsby. 2. On the day of the meeting, Gatsby is even more nervous. Gatsby sends a man to cut Nick’s grass, even though it’s raining and sends another man with flowers to Nick’s home. But when Daisy arrives, Gatsby disappears. Soon, there’s a knock at the door and Gatsby appears wet and deathlike. He knocks over Nick’s mantelpiece clock by accident and is a nervous wreck. 3. Nick leaves them alone for half an hour and when he returns they are very happy. Gatsby offers to take them on a tour of his mansion and Nick third-wheels. In Gatsby’s bedroom, Daisy starts crying as she looks through Gatsby’s shirts and hearing about how Gatsby would stare at the green light on her dock. 4. Nick voices to the reader his doubts about how Daisy could fulfil Gatsby’s idealised vision of her. Nick notes that whilst Gatsby stayed loyal to their love, Daisy married another man she didn’t love, all for money. They then go visit Gatsby’s grounds and he even gets Ewing Klipspringer to play the piano for them. Gatsby holds Daisy’s hand and she whispers something that makes him emotional. Nick, realising his third-wheel status, leaves them and walks alone into the rain. Chapter 6 1. A reporter comes to Gatsby’s home attempting to interview him. The myth of Gatsby has become so great and this makes Gatsby happy. 2. But Nick tells the reader the truth about Gatsby. He was born James Gatz on a farm in North Dakota around 1900. He changed his name to Jay Gatsby at the age of 17. He attended college at St Olaf in southern Minnesota but left after 2 weeks because he couldn’t stand the janitorial work he had to do to pay for the tuition fees. 3. He spent more than a year on the south shore of Lake Superior clamming and fishing and met Dan Cody, 50-year-old multimillionaire expert in the mining of precious metals. Dan Cody takes Jay Gatsby under his wing and makes him his assistant for 5 years aboard his yacht. Cody dies and leaves Gatsby $25,000. But Gatsby doesn’t receive this money because Cody’s mistress legally prevents him from claiming his inheritance. Gatsby dedicates himself to becoming rich and successful. 4. For a few weeks, Nick doesn’t see Gatsby. Then, one Sunday afternoon, Nick visits Gatsby’s home and is startled to find Tom Buchanan and a couple stopping for a drink. Gatsby awkwardly tells Tom that he knows his wife, and invites Tom and his friends to stay for dinner. They apologise but invite Gatsby to dinner. Gatsby accepts, not realizing that their invite was purely rhetorical to be polite. This makes Tom contemptuous of Gatsby’s lack of social grace. 5. The next Saturday night, Tom and Daisy come to a party at Gatsby's. Nick doesn’t find the party that great and Tom is disdainful. Gatsby https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc and Daisy dance which marks the only time Gatsby really gets involved with one of his own parties. 6. When dinner arrives, Tom remarks he wishes to eat with another group. Daisy, always aware of what Tom is really up to, remarks the girl is "common but pretty" and offers her gold pencil in case he wants to take down an address. 7. As the Buchanan couple are leaving, Tom vices his suspicions that Gatsby culminated his wealth through bootlegging. Nick denies this and Daisy angrily retorts that Gatsby made his money from drugstores he owns. 8. After the party, Gatsby is sad because Daisy didn’t enjoy herself. Nick reminds him that he can’t “repeat the past” to which Gatsby idealistically answers “why of course you can!”. This “appalling sentimentality” both disgusts and delights Nick. 9. Nick remembers when Gatsby shared the story of when he kissed Daisy for the first time. Nick believes that in that kiss Gatsby’s dreams of success focussed solely on Daisy. She became an idealised dream and the centre of his life. Now that he has Daisy, Nick reflects, Gatsby’s dream is effectively over. Chapter 7 1. Gatsby’s house becomes much quieter because he stopped all his parties now that he no longer needs them to attract Daisy. He also fired all his servants and replaced them with Wolfsheim’s men so no one can gossip about his and Daisy’s relationship. 2. On the hottest day of the summer, Daisy invites Nick and Gatsby to lunch with her, her husband and Jordan. When Tom leaves the room, Daisy kisses Gatsby on the lips and tells him she loves him. But then the nurse brings in Pammy. Gatsby suddenly keeps glancing at the little girl in surprise. Gatsby then tells Tom that his house is only across the Sound. 3. Lunch is awkward because of the heat and the tension between the men. Daisy starts talking philosophically and then has the idea of going to the city for the day. Daisy and Gatsby lock eyes and she comments aloud that Gatsby always looks like an advertisement. Tom senses that Daisy and Gatsby are in love and he suddenly agrees to go to the city. Before going to the city, Nick and Gatsby agree, in private, that Daisy is quite loud. But Gatsby also comments that her voice is “full of money”. 4. Tom insists on driving Gatsby’s big yellow car. Gatsby and Daisy travel alone in Tom’s coupe and Tom drives Nick and Jordan. The readers are aware that Tom knows about the affair between Daisy and Gatsby. Because Gatsby’s car is low on gas, Tom pulls into Wilson’s garage in the Valley of Ashes. Wilson asks Tom about buying his other car to resell it. He wants to raise money so that he and his wife could move west. Tom is startled at the impending loss of his mistress. He is doubly enraged at the possibility of losing both wife and mistress. 5. Wilson tells Tom that he had become physically ill after learning that his wife had been living a double life. Nick notes that Wilson doesn’t know that Tom is the other man. Nick also thinks that Wilson and Tom are identical, except that Tom is healthy and Wilson is sick. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Nick notices the haunting eyes of Doctor T.J. Eckleburg and then spots Myrtle staring down from the windows above the garage at Jordan Baker. She seems to have mistaken Jordan for Daisy. 6. The group takes a suite at the Plaza Hotel. Tom is quick to challenge Gatsby’s “Oxford man” history. When Gatsby answers confidently, Tom confronts him about the “row” he’s trying to cause between the Buchanans. Daisy tries to quieten Tom but fails. Gatsby says that Daisy never loved Tom and has only ever loved him. Tom protests, but Daisy says it’s true. But then Tom asks her to think about their marital history and Daisy admits she did love Tom before. But she loved Gatsby “too”. This breaks Gatsby’s heart. 7. Tom reveals that Gatsby is involved in organised crime like bootlegging. This scares Daisy and she wants to go home. Tom tells her to go back with Gatsby and not to worry because he won’t “annoy” her anymore. Gatsby takes Daisy in his car. Nick suddenly remembers that the day is his thirtieth birthday In Tom’s car, Nick described the car journey as driving towards death. 8. The reader is given the point of view of Michaelis. He saw Wilson sick in his office and heard Myrtle screaming upstairs. Wilson told him that he had locked her up until they moved west the next day. That evening, Michaelis saw Myrtle shout at Wilson and run into the street. She was killed by a passing car that may have been light green. 9. The point of view returns to Nick. Tom, Nick and Jordan arrive at the scene in their car. Both Tom and Wilson are overcome by grief for Myrtle. Tom suspects that Gatsby ran over Myrtle. Tom, Nick and Jordan drive to the Buchanan’s house. Tom calls a taxi for Nick who waits for it outside. There, he finds Gatsby hiding in the bushes. Gatsby tells Nick that it was Daisy who was driving the car and he tried to stop the accident but was too late. He says that he’ll take the responsibility but he seems to care very little about what happened to Myrtle. He fears that Tom will hurt Daisy. 10. Nick goes and checks on Daisy through the window. He finds her and Tom eating cold fried chicken and drinking ale. Nick tells Gatsby everything is quiet, but Gatbsy still refuses to leave. Nick leaves him “watching over nothing” under the moonlight. Chapter 8 1. Nick goes to see Gatsby for breakfast the next morning and Gatsby tells him that Daisy never came outside that night. He rejects Nick’s advice to forget Daisy and leave Long Island because the police would start questioning him. 2. Gatsby tells Nick about the love between him and Daisy five years ago. He remembers how impressed he was by her wealth, her enormous house, and even by the fact that other men had loved her. To be with her he tricked her into believing he was of the same class as her. One night they slept together, and he felt he had married her. Then he left for World War I. Daisy waited for a while and then married Tom. 3. After they finish breakfast, they go for a walk outside. Gatsby’s gardener tells him that he’s going to drain the pool but Gatsby tells him to wait. He hasn’t used the swimming pool that summer yet. Before leaving, Nick tells Gatsby that he’s worth more than all of the “rotten crowd… put together”. Gatsby smiles in reply. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc 4. That day at work, Nick falls asleep but is woken by a phone call from Jordan. They start arguing and hang up on each other. Nick tells the reader that he doesn’t care for her anymore. 5. Nick tells the reader what happened at Wilson’s garage after Myrtle’s death. Wilson spoke all night to Michaelis about how she had a lover. He tells Michaelis that he suspects the lover to be the man driving the car because Myrtle ran towards it. Wilson told Michaelis how he had confronted her that she was sinning in the eyes of God whilst staring into the eyes of T. J. Eckleburg. Wilson tells Michaelis that he has a way of finding out who was driving the car. In the morning, he leaves his garage. 6. At two in the afternoon, Gatsby goes for a swim and tells his servants to inform him if there was a phone call for him. No phone call came for him. But later in the afternoon, Nick and some of the servants discover Gatsby, shot dead in his pool, shouldering his mattress. Apparently, Wilson, sure that Gatsby is responsible for his wife's death, shoots and kills Gatsby. The gardener finds Wilson’s dead body close by lying on the grass. Chapter 9 1. It’s now two years later and Nick is recounting his memories of the days shortly after Gatsby’s death. Wild rumours about Gatsby’s relationship with Myrtle start circulating which make reporters and gossips prowl around the mansion looking for stories. Nick becomes the main contact for all matters relating to Gatsby because nobody else wanted to be. Daisy and Tom disappear with no forwarding address, and Meyer Wolfsheim says he has pressing business and can’t help at present. 2. Three days after Gatsby’s death, a telegram arrives from Henry C. Gatz. Mr Gatz arrives in person at Gatsby’s mansion for the funeral. He’s an old man wearing cheap clothes and is devastated by his son’s death. He truly believed Gatsby was destined for a great future. Nick tells Mr Gatz that they were close friends. 3. That night, Klipspringer calls. When Nick tells him about the funeral, Klipspringer says he can’t attend. But he asks Nick to send him the pair of tennis shoes he left at Gatsby’s mansion. 4. Gatsby’s funeral takes place the next day. Nick goes to New York to get Wolfsheim to attend the service so more people are present. At his office, Wolfsheim talks of his early memories with Gatsby, whom he claimed to have raised “out of nothing”. Nick tries to convince him to attend the funeral but he refuses because he does not get mixed up with murdered men. 5. Only, Nick, Henry Gatz and, to Nick’s surprise, Owl Eyes show up for Gatsby’s funeral. Owl Eyes pities Gatsby as a “poor son-of-a-bitch”. 6. Nick describes the story as a whole as that of the West since many of the key characters (Daisy, Tom, Nick, Jordan, Gatsby) involved are not from the East. After the death of Gatsby, the East has become haunted for Nick. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc 7. Nick goes to Jordan Baker’s house to end things properly but she tells him she is engaged to another man. Nick doesn’t really believe her. She even accuses Nick of being dishonest. 8. Later that October, Nick runs into Tom Buchanan in New York. He refuses to shake Tom’s hand. He learns that Tom was the one who told Wilson that Gatsby ran over Myrtle. Tom tells Nick that he cried when he gave up the Morningside Heights apartment. Nick doesn’t tell Tom that it was Daisy driving. He describes the Buchanans as living in “vast carelessness” and then retreating to their money. 9. On his last night in West Egg, he walks down Gatsby’s beach and looks over Long Island Sound. He wonders how the first settlers in America felt staring out at the “green breast” of the new continent. He imagines Gatsby’s similar wonder when he realised that the green light belonged to Daisy. 10. Nick describes Gatsby as a believer in the future, a man of promise and faith. He compares everyone to Gatsby - everyone moves forward with their arms outstretched, looking to the future but searching for a lost past. Analysis - Chapter 1 11. Nick’s so-called “advantages” come from his ‘old money’ status. Whilst he doesn’t judge based on class, the Buchanans do. Even Gatsby to some extent, judges based on class. By the end of the novel, the East is haunted for Nick which creates the impression that he has succumbed to judging based on class. This highlights the judgemental culture and the grappling of class dynamics that was quintessential of the Roaring Twenties. When Nick introduces Gatsby, he connects him to both ‘new money’ and the American Dream. Gatsby became undone by the “foul dust” of the Roaring Twenties. The 1920s boom inverts the American Dream. People no longer go west to build a fortune and a life. Instead, people abandoned their roots to come east for the chance at fortune. ‘Old money’ East Egg is opposite ‘new money’ West Egg which symbolically highlights the class rivalry of the Roaring Twenties. This pinpoints the central theme of the novel. Whilst the ‘new money’ families in the West Egg overcompensate on their lack of generational wealth through “garish” displays of luxury, the ‘old money’ community find this distasteful and lacking in grace. Tom’s riding clothes highlight his ‘old money’ status. His brute-like monstrous body suggests the hyper-masculinity that Tom underpins. This makes him scary and positions him as the antagonist of the novel. Indeed, Tom’s brute body challenges Gatsby, undermines Nick, hurts Daisy and ruins Myrtle. It is also a symbol of his underlying monstrous behaviour that his social grace and etiquette scarcely veils. Jordan’s constant boredom with her surroundings highlights the superficial and shallow nature of the ‘old money’. This further emphasises the futility of the American Dream. Even after working so hard to achieve great wealth, one’s surroundings would make them bored. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Tom’s racist opinions and reading highlights the white-supremacist, colonial ideologies still rife in the ‘old money’ of the 1920s. Furthermore, his misogynist, libertine tendencies paint him in a negative light as Daisy and Myrtle become his victims. The first time, Nick describes an encounter with Gatsby is at the end of the chapter. This is interesting as the reader sees Gatsby’s “extraordinary gift for hope” in his outstretched arms towards the green light. Here, his outstretched arms highlight his yearning for the light and thus, by association, Daisy. Her marriage to Tom Buchanan is only a minor obstacle for Gatsby as his love transcends marital sanctities and earthly boundaries. Key Quotes & Analysis “There was something gorgeous about him, some heightened sensitivity to the promises of life” ○ Here, the adjective ‘gorgeous’ highlights a sense of homoeroticism that certainly creeps up elsewhere in the text. Nick admires Gatsby a lot, his love for him drives him to narrate this tale to immortalise Gatsby and his ability to love. Fitzgerald introduces a topic that is slowly garnering tolerance in American society. Fitzgerald’s use of ‘heightened sensitivity’ further emphasises the homoerotic undertones of the text as Tom, later in the chapter (see below), embodies ideas of hyper-masculinity. Gatsby believes he is destined to marry Daisy. She represents to him the ‘promises of life’. “Not even the effeminate swank of his riding clothes could hide the enormous power of that body - he seemed to fill those glistening boots until he strained the top lacing, and you could see a great pack of muscle shifting when his shoulder moved under his thin coat. It was a body capable of enormous leverage - a cruel body” ○ Here, Tom’s muscular and masculine build is emphasised. It is interesting that Nick notices and comments on his muscles. It supports the idea that Nick is attracted to men. But this fascination with Tom is unlike his love for Gatsby. Tom appears dangerous and is positioned as the antagonist from the onset. Tom is not emasculated by the effeminate luxury of his clothes. If anything, it makes him all the more masculine. This is all epitomised through the use of the adjective ‘cruel’. It is this body that rivals Gatsby, undermines Nick, cheats on Daisy and exploits Myrtle. “I hope she’ll be a fool - that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” ○ Here, Daisy’s anti-woman rhetoric is concerning. Indeed, being married to a misogynist brute has turned her into a self-loathing soul. But perhaps Daisy has a point. Even by the 1920s, women were largely considered useless and inferior sex. If Pammy Buchanan grows up to be a ‘beautiful little fool’, she’d be just like her mother, which isn’t too bad. Daisy is married to an ‘old money’ wealthy man and has a secure future. But, this is partly why she doesn’t leave Tom even after he cheats on her continuously. This, of course, makes her a fool and a coward. She prefers the stability of superficial bank notes rather than her own happiness and fulfilment. To be a fool is to be too simple or ignorant to correctly perceive what is happening around you. Perhaps Daisy wishes she herself was a fool. This would https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc allow her to enjoy the luxuries of being Tom’s wife without being aware of his disloyalty towards her. Most interestingly, however, Fitzgerald depicts how gender roles functioned in the Roaring Twenties. “He stretched out his arms towards the dark water in a curious way, and, far as I was from him, I could have sworn he was trembling. Involuntarily, I glanced seaward - and distinguished nothing except a single green light, minute and far away, that might have been the end of the dock” ○ Here, Gatsby’s outstretched arms highlight his yearning for Daisy that causes him to tremble. His love for her is so great and powerful. Indeed, the colour “green” is synonymous with hope and has connotations of fertility and wealth. The “green light” is without a doubt the most iconic symbol from Fitzgerald’s novel for his love for Daisy and the American Dream. Perhaps Gatsby hopes that his love would give birth to a proper relationship with Daisy. His love for Daisy is most symbolised through her wealth. She represents the American dream for him and money. His initial attraction towards her was because of her house and her wealth. He refers to her voice as “full of money” in chapter seven. Thus, Gatsby’s attraction towards green epitomises his desire to be rich and successful. Analysis - Chapter 2 The description of the “valley of ashes” recalls the bleak spiritual landscape of T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, a poem published in 1922, the year in which The Great Gatsby is set. The poem exposes the materialistic and consumerist values in modern society. This mirrors Fitzgerald’s aims in his novel. The Valley of Ashes represents the people that are excluded from the Roaring Twenties. The ashes and dust remind the reader of the “foul dust” that preyed on Gatsby. Indeed, the unblinking eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg watch everything in the Valley of Ashes. This calls to mind Nietzsche’s theory of ‘the death of God’ in the late 1800s. It also highlights the rise of the media and the power of advertisements. This is later reflected when Daisy calls Gatsby “an advertisement” in chapter seven. The Wilson couple is exploited by Tom’s indifferent and callous attitudes towards them. Whilst George is a “spiritless man, anaemic”, Myrtle carries her “flesh sensuously”. This highlights Myrtle’s desperation to escape her life and enter the world of desire, money and luxury. She cuckolds her husband and changes her “costume” often to fit the money status she desires but can’t touch. Myrtle, to a certain extent, is bought by Tom. He buys her gifts like dogs as pets and in turn, gets to have sex. He views his relationship with Myrtle in material terms or a physical affair rather than an emotional commitment. In contrast, Gatsby’s love and idealistic devotion to Daisy is entirely emotional. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc The apartment represents the place of immorality as the group engage in gluttony and lust. They drink themselves senseless and fulfil their sexual desires. There is even a moment when Nick puts to bed Mr McKee which suggests a homoerotic episode. When Tom punches Myrtle for being envious (a deadly sin) of Daisy, he performs an act of wrath which further emphasises another deadly sin. They lay around doing nothing (sloth) and bask in the promise of money of the Roaring Twenties that Tom embodies (greed and pride). Thus, the apartment becomes a fertile ground for sin and evil. It is worth noting that this lewd depiction of intoxication is set against the backdrop of the Prohibition Act of 1919. It remained in force until 1933. This created severe limitations on producing and consuming alcoholic drinks. Fitzgerald hints that part of Gatsby's immense wealth is his involvement (whether explicit or implicit, readers do not know) with bootlegging. The fascination of Gatsby highlights the hollow nature of both Gatsby and those gossiping about him. Gatsby represents the corruption of the American Dream. Whilst Gatsby achieves the American Dream of transcending social barriers by climbing the social ladder and obtaining great wealth and success, he had to make sacrifices. First of which was his need to reinvent himself. In an anti-semitic age of America, James Gatz (Gatz is a Jewish German name) would not have gone far in trying to obtain wealth. He had to reinvent himself as Jay Gatsby to escape his past. In this way, Gatsby can obtain wealth and rub shoulders with the upper-class and be one of them. Gatsby, however, fails in his American Dream of winning Daisy back. Her rejection of Gatsby corrupts him and thus she is rendered as the embodiment of the American Dream. Gatsby’s idealised version of Daisy crumbles the moment he dares to touch it. She is not what he expects and life cannot go back to Louisville five years ago. Instead, it must plough on and Gatsby must pursue another dream or else perish at the merciless hands of George Wilson. Key Quotes & Analysis “This is a valley of ashes—a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens; where ashes take the forms of houses and chimneys and rising smoke and, finally, with a transcendent effort, of men who move dimly and already crumbling through the powdery air.” ○ Here, “wheat” and “gardens” are associated with life and nature whilst “ashes” belong to the realm of death. Fitzgerald combines these images, in contrast, to highlight that beauty is destroyed. If “ashes grow like wheat”, then death rules and spreads. This simile reveals the spread of immorality in 1920s America. Fitzgerald uses long lists of the objects made from ash to emphasise the scale of decay. The repetition of “and”, and thus the polysyndeton, slows the pace of reading, emphasising the trudging drudgery of life in the valley. Furthermore, the image of “transcendent effort” shows how all the men’s energy is taken up in just existing. But despite their struggle to survive, they’re “already crumbling”. “I want you to meet my girl” ○ Tom is very bold for wanting to introduce his mistress to his wife’s cousin. He clearly doesn’t think Nick would tell Daisy about what he knows or rather, Tom just doesn’t care whether Daisy knows or not. The verb “want” highlights Tom’s desire https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc for Nick to perhaps approve of his choice of mistress. This also portrays the double standards of 1920s America for men and women. When men have mistresses, they are perceived as doubly masculine and very attractive. But when women take up lovers, they are abused and driven to their death (Myrtle) or they retreat back into their lives and selves in solitude, silence and selfishness (Daisy). “She was in the middle thirties, and faintly stout, but she carried her flesh sensuously as some women can [..] looking at him flush in the eye. Then she wet her lips..” ○ Myrtle is very seductively described. She is the microcosmic representation of the desperate lower-class woman who tries to transcend the status quo by climbing the social ladder through sex. In doing so, she destroys herself and ruins her marriage. She subjects herself to the brutal masculine force of Tom’s hand when he breaks her nose (see below) and the violent jealousy of her husband when he locks her up and beats her upon finding out she took up a lover. Fitzgerald highlights the quintessential gender roles and expectations. He exposes the Madonna-Whore Complex existing in the Flapper Age. “‘You see,’ cried Catherine triumphantly. She lowered her voice again. ‘It’s really his wife that’s keeping them apart. She’s a Catholic and they don’t believe in divorce.’ Daisy was not a Catholic, and I was a little shocked at the elaborateness of the lie.” ○ The “elaborateness of the lie” highlights Tom’s deception to exert power and have fun. This paints him in a negative light as he exploits the women in his life. It also portrays Myrtle as a pathetic woman who doesn’t see her exploitation. This makes the reader feel sympathy for Myrtle. Tom’s money and “vast carelessness” (chapter 9) allows him to get away with hurting others all in the name of self-satisfaction. “I was within and without, simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life” ○ Nick's critical outlook on the life of the East Egg is interesting here. Fitzgerald uses Nick’s observation of the vice to show the next step in his journey of discovery about whether the American dream and social status holds value as he believed at the start of the story. The use of the verb “enchanted” highlights Nick’s fascination with the upper classes of society and how they operate. Nick sympathises with Gatsby and loves him because Gatsby represents the tragic hero. He is a self-made man but also a man who is made and undone by society. The judgemental and callous upper class make Gatsby suffer to get wealth and love. He is constantly faced with obstacles - whether meaningless rumours, unrequited love or the “cruel body” of Tom (chapter one). “Making a short deft movement, Tom Buchanan broke her nose with his open hand” ○ Here, the reported style of the narrative highlights Tom’s arrogance and violence. This only adds to his unlikeability as he resorts to exerting his power violently when he doesn’t get what he wants. The use of Tom’s full name epitomises his callous violence as it puts the blame singularly on him. This foreshadows Tom’s power to falsely inform George Wilson that it was Gatsby who killed Myrtle. This, in https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc turn, get Gatsby killed and George kills himself in the perfect and tragic murder-suicide of the book. Tom finds it very easy to hurt those that stand in his way. His guiltless carelessness marks him plainly as the antagonist and he juxtaposes Gatsby who loves too much. Analysis - Chapter 3 Fitzgerald uses poetic language to create a magical atmosphere for Gatsby’s parties. His “blue gardens” are alive with the “whisperings and the champagne and the stars”. Throughout his description, Fitzgerald appeals to the reader’s five senses as though they were there as one of the guests. The party soon increases in pace and tempo with each incident ending on the climax of the crash and the denouement of Nick’s pseudo-humble words. Fitzgerald exposes the depravity and hedonism of the wealthy in 1920s America through Gatsby’s party. There’s an unsettling contrast between the guest’s reckless behaviour and the enchanting surroundings that luxury has to offer. This highlights both Nick and Fitzgerald’s simultaneous attraction and repulsion for the era. In fact, the emptiness of this era is symbolised by the “oranges and lemons” that are reduced to “pulpless halves” by Monday. Gatsby’s ‘new money’ guests exploit his parties for a taste of luxury even when they don’t know him. He is just a means for a good party and exists only in the form of rumours about him. Nick’s feeling of discomfort suggests that he senses the emptiness of the party. The party’s emptiness reflects the shallowness of the American Dream. This shallowness is also reflected in the “realism” of the books Owl Eyes admires in Gatsby’s library. Despite their “realism”, the people of the Jazz Age look for enchantment and fantasy through the superficial luxuries that life affords them. Owl Eyes’ comment highlights the tension between reality and the myth of Gatsby. This enchantment is also embodied in Gatsby’s smile. Its hopeful disillusion mimics the façade of the Roaring Twenties. But it is this same smile that holds an element of distance because he aspires to rekindle his love for Daisy. Nick learns that Gatsby is more than a smile and rumours when Jordan tells him the “amazing” story of Gatsby. Owl Eyes’ car accident symbolises two things. Most importantly, the recklessness of the Roaring Twenties and its indifference towards the pain and suffering it imposes on others. It is a shallow recklessness, one that disregards humans and treats them as disposable, especially the lower working class or ‘no money’. But this scene also foreshadows Myrtle’s death when Daisy runs over Myrtle. In his car crash, Owl Eyes was not the one driving: in the same way, Gatsby is mistaken to be the driver in Myrtle’s death. When Owl Eyes was in the library, he muttered to himself “if one brick was removed the whole library was liable to collapse”. This reveals the futile and weak illusion of Gatsby. Should one aspect of his outward image crumble, the entire illusion would shatter. This foreshadows the moment in chapter 8 when “‘Jay Gatsby’ had broken up like glass https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc against Tom’s hard malice”. Here, Gatsby’s fragile world is shattered by the brutally physical reality of Tom Buchanan. Nick’s discomfort with the careless Roaring Twenties mirrors the reader’s discomfort with the easy money and hypocritical loose morals. He claims very boldly that he is the most honest person he’s ever met. This makes the reader question Nick’s reliability as he views Gatsby through a rose-tinted lens and continues to date Jordan despite thinking her as “incurably dishonest”. Key Quotes & Analysis “In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars” ○ The contrast between the colour ‘blue’ and the colour green of normal ‘gardens’ highlights a fantasy-like atmosphere to Gatsby’s party. He appears as an illusionist in his methods of enchanting his guests. The simile of ‘moths’ reveals the attraction the guests have to his parties, even when they know so little about their host. Fitzgerald’s use of the polysyndeton and triadic structure (rule of three) further emphasises the fairy-tale elements Gatsby can weave into his parties. The whispering and the champagne are also constants in every party as his guests try to decipher Gatsby with their wild theories even when he offers them copious alcohol. Perhaps this quote also highlights the inherent emptiness of 1920s America with their appreciation for the shallow and superficial. “It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life.” ○ Nick is fascinated by Gatsby’s smile as he observes the psychological power of it. Nick starts with a cliché. But he soon corrects himself to highlight Gatsby’s magnetic effect. Gatsby’s smile offers “eternal reassurance” because it attempts to convey to Nick desperation and the need for support. But readers later understand that Gatsby is a façade, a performance that has been mastered over the years. Despite his heartbreaking story, his admirable affection towards Daisy and his earnest intentions,’ Gatsby’ is only skin-deep. Fitzgerald indicates that Gatsby had perfected a way to respond to others that makes them feel entirely known and meaningful. Thus both Gatsby and those he smiles at become fundamentally empty: Gatsby for performing, but others for so desperately wanting to be understood, believed in and assured. “She was incurably dishonest. [..] Dishonesty in a woman is a thing you never blame deeply” ○ By today’s feminist and pro-woman standards, this quote is shocking. Not only does Nick expose the underlying misogyny that was rife in 1920s America, but he also proves to be just like Tom in his view of the women all around him. Suddenly, readers are forced to face their dismissive reaction when Nick doesn’t defend his cousin. This paints Jordan’s character with a new layer. Her name links her to two makes of cars: Jordan and Baker. This emphasises her materialistic and modern character. Some critics argue that Jordan is gay because of Fitzgerald’s masculine description of her “erect carriage” and “hard jaunty body”. Jordan appears to https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc reject the stereotypical role of a submissive and meek woman. She paves her own way towards success. Perhaps one can read Fitzgerald’s text through a progressive feminist lens. Perhaps Fitzgerald’s depiction of Jordan highlights the subversive woman - a mild femme fatale in her aura of mystery and lack of care when driving. In this same sense, Daisy is a sort of femme fatale in her carelessness. Analysis - Chapter 4 This chapter opens with another damning portrayal of the 1920s. Nick expects the reader to recognise these people and their immoral ways. This further emphasises the darkness beneath the lavish and carefree lifestyle. Gatsby’s story doesn’t add up. It seems that in typical ‘new money’ fashion, Gatsby entirely reinvents his identity after coming to New York and getting rich. Whilst he achieves the American Dream of incredible wealth, he sacrifices his real identity. When Gatsby speeds in his car it paints him as careless in his driving, his lifestyle (with all the liquor) and his blindness and “extraordinary gift for hope” even when the odds and Tom are against him. Wolfsheim's connection to Gatsby is a sign of the corruption of the American Dream. He is bad news from the beginning but Nick and the reader can't do much about it, other than witness the corruption of the Jazz Age consume Gatsby. When Tom and Gatsby meet each other, it foreshadows the conflict between them in chapter seven and the symbolic conflict between ‘old money’ and ‘new money’. Jordan’s story highlights the real Gatsby's purpose in life. He has achieved the Roaring Twenties version of the American Dream by becoming very rich. To achieve that wealth he reinvented himself, possibly became involved in criminal activities, and sacrificed his past. But he did it all in service of a purer, more traditional American Dream: real and true love. Daisy chose the security of money over love when she chose Tom over Gatsby. So Gatsby made himself rich: he thinks that money will win her back. The green light represents both Gatsby's dream of recreating his past with Daisy and the corrupt American Dream of extreme wealth. Key Quotes & Analysis “I didn’t want you to think that I was just some nobody” ○ Gatsby’s self-conscious words highlight his resentment towards his past and the ‘no money’. Tom later calls Gatsby “Mr Nobody from Nowhere” in chapter seven. This highlights the disregard Tom has for Gatsby because of his ‘new money’ status. Gatsby creates his image and myth to be someone worthy of attention and worthy of Daisy’s love. This quote suggests irony since, people throughout New York, in all walks of life seem to know who Gatsby is. Although he is well known there is no historical weight or family meaning attached to the name Gatsby, he is aware of the fact that no one knows definitively where his money comes from and presents himself in a way to contrast this. Gatsby’s efforts are all in an attempt to encourage his wish to be ‘old money’ since he is aware of the positive connotations attached to this, within his society. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc “Even Gatsby could happen, without any particular wonder” ○ Nick shows the myth of Gatsby is plausible because of his limitless ability to dream. Whilst Nick has a hard time believing the mostly false story of Gatsby’s life as the son of a wealthy family, he doesn’t challenge Gatsby’s outrageous lies. For Nick, anything is possible when it comes to Gatsby, especially in the large and liberated city of New York. Gatsby’s success is only made possible because of America. Nick suggests that being successful without a generational reputation is only possible in the United States. “He’s an Oggsford man” ○ The character of Meyer Wolfsheim represents the criminal underworld of the 1920s. Wolfsheim is introduced just after Gatsby describes his past life as a “young rajah”. The juxtaposition of Gatsby’s elaborate lie and the introduction of Wolfsheim hints that there’s more to Gatsby than what meets the eye. Wolfsheim’s character is based on the real Arnold Rothstein - a notorious Jewish gangster who lived in New York and was involved in bootlegging. Fitzgerald’s portrayal of Wolfsheim is heavily anti-Semitic. Nick draws attention to his “tragic” nose and mocks his speech: “gonnegtion” and “Oggsford”. That Wolfsheim mispronounces Oxford and feels the need to explain its significance is indicative of his position, like Gatsby, as an outsider to the East Egg, old wealth society. This makes Wolfsheim a comic character which is at odds with his ruthless behaviour and character. Wolfsheim has “human molars” cuff buttons. This highlights a cannibalistic effect as well as other nasty anti-semitic ideas. Even his name, “Wolfsheim'' suggests a primitive and predatory element to him. This adds to the anti-semitism that is seeped in the portrayal of Wolfsheim. “The officer looked at Daisy while she was speaking, in a way that every young girl wants to be looked at some time” ○ Readers finally discover more about why Gatsby has taken such an interest in Jordan and Nick out of all people; they have a connection to his former lover Daisy. This establishes the relationship between Daisy and Gatsby as they have a past and his love for Daisy was not always unrequited as it first appears. Despite his accomplishment in achieving the American Dream wealth-wise, he doesn’t feel accomplished because he has everything except the thing he really wants: Daisy’s love. This quote highlights that Daisy was just like any other American girl - she just wanted to be loved. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc “‘But it wasn’t a coincidence at all’ [..] ‘Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay” ○ Gatsby’s entire life is built around his obsession with Daisy. Everything he has built is merely a way to get closer to her. Gatsby is really stuck in the illusion he has of the past and trying to recreate it. In this way, Gatsby can’t move on with his life because he is adamant to win Daisy back. And yet, Daisy is only a distant and idealised love that is unreachable. Analysis - Chapter 5 When Gatsby gives Nick money for setting up the meeting, he reveals how he has been corrupted by his pursuit of the money. He feels that money was crucial to making his love with Daisy a reality. Gatsby sees everything through the green lens of money. Fitzgerald uses pathetic fallacy to suggest that their reunion is tragic. It is “pouring rain” and there is a “damp mist” that blocks the two lovers, recalling tears. The only other time it rains is on Gatsby’s funeral in chapter nine which highlights the unreachable and corrupted American Dream. The most symbolic moment of this chapter is when Gatsby accidentally knocks over the “defunct mantelpiece clock”. Here, the obsolete clock suggests the ship has already sailed for Daisy and Gatsby. One can read Daisy's breakdown in front of the “beautiful shirts” in two ways. Perhaps she realizes that Gatsby could have given her the life she chose by marrying Tom or perhaps she realizes that she's most in love with money. Indeed this highlights the ideals of 1920s America where appearances were everything. Either way, she misses Gatsby describing his love for her. The green light is reduced to little or no significance now that Gatsby has Daisy. Gatsby is so caught up in his dream for Daisy that he doesn’t notice that she changed. In fact, once Gatsby has Daisy, he forgets about Nick. This could be read as a critique of ‘new money’ values. Key Quotes & Analysis “The exhilarating ripple of her voice was a wild tonic in the rain.” ○ Throughout the text, Daisy’s voice is an extended metaphor. It is a ‘wild tonic in the rain’ or “full of money”. Daisy’s voice becomes significant in its siren-like quality. It draws Gatsby in from across the bay (perhaps this can be substituted for a sea in the sea-quest allegory). Her voice has life; it is enchanting and alluring for Gatsby and anyone else who listens. The sound of her voice is a cure for Gatsby’s longing. She represents the American Dream that Gatsby must chase and attain at any cost. “His head leaned back so far that it rested against the face of a defunct mantelpiece clock [..] Luckily the clock took this moment to tilt dangerously at the pressure of his head, whereupon he turned and caught it with trembling fingers, and set it back in place” https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc ○ In this heart-wrenching moment, time and love are interconnected. It is too late for Gatsby, Daisy is even more unreachable now. Perhaps the mantelpiece clock symbolises a crutch. The act of leaning against a clock can symbolise that Gatsby is using time as a crutch to support his hopes of winning Daisy after having lost her. Perhaps knocking the clock over highlights that ‘time is money’. Fitzgerald shows throughout the novel that time and money are connected. The fact that the clock is broken may symbolise that “time is up”. Nonetheless, this scene demonstrated Gatsby’s determination to win back Daisy, even when the world is set against him. “He hadn’t once ceased looking at Daisy, and I think he revalued everything in his house according to the measure of response it drew from her well-loved eyes.” ○ Gatsby’s love for Daisy is pure. He made so much money, just to please her. When he ‘revalued everything’, the reader sees the lengths to which Gatsby would go, all in the hopes of winning Daisy back. This chapter specifically shows Fitzgerald’s use of eyes and voices to move feelings. Daisy, whose voice is “was a wild tonic”, also had “well-loved eyes”. This romanticised description of her places her on a pedestal. She is idealised and worshipped by Gatsby. Perhaps if Wilson views the eyes of T. J. Eckleburg as God, Gatsby could be said to view Daisy as God and heaven combined. "It makes me sad because I've never seen such — such beautiful shirts before." ○ Daisy’s inherent materialistic nature is exposed here. She cries over English shirts. The absurdity of this may leave the reader very shocked. But perhaps, the reader shouldn’t be shocked. After all, Daisy never understood sentimentality in the way Gatsby ever did. She only sees the world through the green-tinted lens of money. She chooses Tom over Gatsby because of money. It is her base desire, in the same way, that Gatsby’s base desire is to win Daisy (perhaps she substituted for the American Dream in his eyes). “There must have been moments even that afternoon when Daisy tumbled short of his dreams—not through her own fault but because of the colossal vitality of his illusion. [..] No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart.” ○ Nick expresses his doubts over the couple’s love and he has every right to. The reader sees Nick’s point - Daisy and Gatsby are no longer compatible. She changed too much and Gatsby is still stuck in second gear. Fitzgerald’s poetic language, once again, amplifies the gut-wrenching heartbreak of Gatsby and Daisy. The reader knows that they would face a tragedy. Daisy “tumbled short of his dreams”: this crude and inelegant phrase reduces Daisy’s position on her pedestal. She could no longer be seen under the golden spotlight of Gatsby’s dreams. His “extraordinary gift for hope” is presented through the “colossal vitality of his illusion”. There is a lot at stake for Gatsby - Daisy was his sole dream. And yet, his dreams were “beyond” reality and now his heart will be left empty and “ghostly” as Daisy lets him down. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Analysis - Chapter 6 Gatsby is a self-made man who ends up achieving the American Dream, even if it’s a little corrupted. He literally created himself, from changing his name to creating his own myth. Gatsby was created in the pursuit of the American Dream. His story is more common than the rumours allow to suggest - he is the American dreamer. He represents a quintessential member of the rags-to-riches class. But at the heart of this quest to success is Daisy. She represents the class and wealth that he aspires to. The conflict between Gatsby and Tom, new money and old money, continues to build. Here, Gatsby fails to understand the ‘old money’ manner of insincere politeness; he mistakes it for actual politeness. This shows the difference between the earnest ‘new money’ and the corrupted ‘old money’. Regardless, they both share a shallowness. Nick feels sorry for Gatsby and sides with him against Tom. Whilst Tom's hatred for the party is to be expected, the fact that Daisy is not enjoying herself suggests that Gatsby might not so easily be able to rekindle their love. There may be too many obstacles. Daisy’s presence also exposes Nick’s growing comfort around the West Egg hedonistic lifestyle. Gatsby believes in the future and the American Dream and believes that money can buy both. Nick comments on Gatsby's “appalling sentimentality” because it has made Daisy into a symbol of perfection, an idealized vision to which Gatsby has sacrificed his identity. Gatsby is adamant that one can “repeat the past” and is desperate to regain what he once lost. Key Quotes & Analysis “He was a son of God - a phrase which, if it means anything, means just that - and he must be about His Father’s business, the servant of a vast, vulgar and meretricious beauty” ○ Fitzgerald’s comparison of Gatsby and Jesus showcases Gatsby’s inherent earnest feelings. His purpose revolves around Daisy in the same way Jesus’s mission revolved around saving those around him. Gatsby is the servant of a big, crude and empty shell of a life. Perhaps Fitzgerald suggests that Jesus was similar in his purpose. The world is too cruel for those with pure and earnest hearts. It chews you up before proving that evil lives under every rock of this world. “He wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should go to Tom and say: ‘I never loved you’. After she had obliterated four years” ○ Gatsby reduces his mission to two simple steps: He impresses Daisy and then she dismisses her married life to go back to Gatsby. Of course, it is not as easy as that. Gatsby is asking for too much: he wants Daisy to go three steps back instead of forwards. The verb “obliterated” is telling and ominous. The consequences of leaving Tom would be catastrophic for her. “‘You can’t repeat the past’ [..] ‘Why of course you can!’” ○ This quote can summarise the whole novel. Whilst Gatsby has achieved his American Dream of wealth, he loves a girl he cannot call his own. He yearns for https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Daisy and she is unreachable, buried in her careless ‘old money’ life. This also shows the class divides of the Roaring Twenties. Indeed, Gatsby knows he cannot really repeat the past but he holds on to the idea with his “extraordinary gift for hope”. It is this same hope that gave Gatsby the confidence to be rich and successful. But it is foolish to think he can turn back time when Daisy is married with a child. Gatsby’s dreams begin to shatter under the realistic light of Nick’s comments and observations. Gatsby seems to want to “recover something, some idea of himself perhaps” when he talks of the past. Perhaps he wants to preserve his lifestyle through Daisy, she would validate and consummate his lifestyle and dream. “He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever wed his unutterable vision to her perishable breath [..] At his lips' touch she blossomed for him, like a flower and the incarnation was complete” ○ The poetic imagery here makes Gatsby’s love very romantic and tragic. He is the tragic lover that bears the brunt of the American Dream’s corruption. The flower simile and metaphor elude to femininity and female sexuality. It is a euphemism for their sexual intercourse. She “blossomed for him” and this makes Gatsby feel “married to her, that was all”. Gatsby’s eagerness to love Daisy places a heavy expectation that she meets his “unutterable vision”. However, they share an “uncommunicable forever”. They are not meant for each other. Analysis - Chapter 7 This is the climax of the novel. After getting Daisy, Gatsby quits the parties. This shows how turbulent and ever-changing the ‘new money’ was. When Daisy kisses Gatsby, the readers and Gatsby feel that he's won. But Gatsby is left shocked when he sees Daisy’s daughter. She symbolizes a shared past between Daisy and Tom that Gatsby can't alter. Tom senses and discovers Gatsby and his wife’s affair. Daisy's comparison of Gatsby to a man in an advertisement shows her corruption by the media and consumer culture. Beneath her skin, she is empty and only cares for the material. Gatsby and Tom’s car swap is important to the plot. Myrtle seeing Tom in Gatsby's car drives her to her death. Even Wilson has his own American Dream of moving west. Tom's world seems to fall apart when he realises that Daisy is slipping away from him and into Gatsby’s ready hands and Myrtle would move away and out of reach. This pushes Tom over the brink. Nick notices the fundamental similarity between Tom and Wilson. Both are only separated by money, otherwise, they are pretty much identical in their behaviour and brute force. Tom confronts Gatsby which draws attention to their different class. Interestingly, Daisy likes things the way they are and she didn’t want any confrontation. In a way, she is similar to Tom: she finds it acceptable to lead a double betraying life. She feels no remorse for betraying either Tom or Gatsby. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Tom’s hostility is probably best demonstrated when he taunts Gatsby by calling him “Mr Nobody from Nowhere”. This is only insulting to Gatsby because he had fought a long battle to prove to everyone he wasn’t just some “nobody”. When Gatsby has Daisy confesses that she never loved Tom, for a brief moment it appears as though his sacrifice had been worthwhile. But this soon shatters as does the myth and illusion of Gatsby. Gatsby sees Daisy’s past as just that one month they spent together. He places all his hopes and dreams in recreating that month they spent together five years ago, and in doing so, he forgets to live in the present. Gatsby corrupted himself and his dream to win Daisy's heart. Now that corruption scares her away. Tom sends Daisy off with Gatsby as a final insult. Nick's wariness about the future and his comment about the car headed toward death foreshadows a death in the novel and the end of the Roaring Twenties. Wilson tries to make his dream of a new life with Myrtle a reality. But almost every character’s dreams die with Myrtle’s death. She proves that the ‘no money’ could never transcend societal barriers and boundaries. The gates of the status quo are rigid and fixed in place. Daisy is the one behind the wheel, but just as ‘old money’ hides its corruption behind a disguise of good manners, Daisy hides behind Gatsby. Gatsby dedicated his life to winning Daisy's heart. Now he only cares about her and ignores Myrtle's death. Daisy chooses the security of Tom over Gatsby's love, for the second time. And still, Gatsby does not betray their love, even when it’s technically dead. Key Quotes & Analysis “As he left the room again she got up and went over to Gatsby and pulled his face down, kissing him on the mouth” ○ Here, Daisy is surprisingly active in her display of love towards Gatsby. For the first time, Gatsby is not the one who continually courts her. She does not fear her husband walking back into the room. She turns into Tom in her easy betrayal and faithlessness. Her bold displays of affection place Gatsby as the object of her love and this makes it seem like he’s one. However, this all comes shattering down when she chooses Tom over Gatsby. Gatsby is only ever a sideshow for Daisy and she leads him on to then abandon him. “You resemble the advertisement of the man” ○ This paints Daisy as inherently materialistic. All she cares about is the material world. Perhaps too, she views love as a material object. One can give a Marxist reading of the novel which highlights the class divide between Daisy and Gatsby. He is the object of her consumption and her fleeting lust. This also shows the rise of the media and consumer culture which only feeds the Capitalist factory of society. Perhaps we are Gatsbys. Just like advertisements, Gatsby sells himself through his myth. He fails to dispel the rumours surrounding his identity. The readers could relate to this with the rise of social media and the inherent vanity of all humans. This brings to mind the story of the greek Narcissus who fell in love with his own appearance. The motif of advertisements creeps up again when George tells Michaelis that he confronted Myrtle about sinning in front of the eyes of https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc God (T. J. Eckleburg). The eyes of T. J. Eckleburg are synonymous with God and the effects of consumer culture are highlighted. “‘Oh, you want too much!’ [...] ‘I did love him once - but I loved you too’” ○ Daisy breaks Gatsby’s heart. She places Gatsby as secondary and this shatters Gatsby as he always put Daisy at the forefront of his hopes and dreams. Daisy views her love for both Gatsby and Tom as equal. She cannot choose between the two loves, but she can choose Tom’s money over Gatsby’s earnestness. She doesn’t place Gatsby on the pedestal the way he does for her. This breaks the reader’s heart as well as Gatsby’s. Sadly, Gatsby does not give up on Daisy even after this happens. He continues to be faithful to their love even as he shoulders his mattress. Daisy can easily eat cold fried chicken and drink ale; she can easily retreat to her carelessness. But Gatsby cannot fathom another love. “They saw her left breast was swinging loose like a flap, and there was no need to listen for the heart beneath” ○ The description of Myrtle’s death is sexually charged. Her “left breast” swings “loose like a flap”. She is stripped from her dignity and she is sexualised even in death. Here, readers see how she is doubly discriminated against in the novel: both as a woman and as the lower class. Myrtle’s death signifies the death of every other relationship and everyone else’s dreams. Her death means that her marriage fails and her affair is broken. Daisy and Gatsby can’t happen because Tom has no one else and Nick resolves to honestly break things with Jordan. Gatsby’s dream of Daisy is shattered and George’s dream of moving west dies with Myrtle. In essence, her whole life is reduced to the sexualisation of her “left breast”. It mirrors the “fresh, green breast” of America that appealed to the first Dutch settlers. Analysis - Chapter 8 This chapter marks that Gatsby’s dream is dead. Gatsby's story explains his actions. He was in love with the idea of Daisy: Daisy's love gave Gatsby an identity - a purpose as a young man and made his made-up ‘new money’ identity legitimate. It seems that Gatsby believes he can only preserve that feeling of purpose through Daisy. Myrtle's death destroys Wilson's dream, leaving him nothing. The Roaring Twenties conflict between old and new money has destroyed him: he can't even distinguish an advertisement from God. Fitzgerald builds tension through incomplete accounts to build up tension and suspense that ends with the crescendo of Gatsby’s death. Gatsby dies shouldering his mattress. This is poignant as it amplifies the image of Gatsby as Jesus. Nick calls him “a son of God” in chapter six to highlight Gatsby’s earnest intentions. Gatsby’s death is almost a crucifixion and this further emphasises Gatsby’s innocence and his earnestness. The hedonistic recklessness of the Jazz Age destroys every relationship: Myrtle and Wilson, Myrtle and Tom, Daisy and Gatsby, Jordan and Nick. Only ‘old money’ prevails: Daisy returns to Tom, though she sacrifices her real happiness for that. https://bit.ly/pmt-cc https://bit.ly/pmt-edu https://bit.ly/pmt-cc Key Quotes & Analysis “He wa

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