Jimmy Gatz or Jay Gatsby
Have you ever been embarrassed by who you are, of what your life is or has been like? Jay Gatsby or Jimmy Gatz was a wealthy man who lived in West Egg. Who in the past was a poor person, who served in the army. He then was invited to a party where he fell in love with a wealthy young lady named Daisy. After them being together, he began to have a sensation to have money and become a different person with wealth so him and Daisy could be together and from there on he changed his name to Jay Gatsby. Jimmy Gatz is the real person because he is the real dreamer of the dream, changed his name, not the person he was, and would never forget his past. Jimmy Gatz is the real person, not Jay Gatsby because he is the real dreamer of the dream. Jimmy Gatz was the one who dreamt of being a wealthy man, who would achieve his goal of being one. Who wanted to marry Daisy because he loved her. “It doesn’t matter any more. Just tell him the truth- that you never loved him- and it’s all wiped out forever.” (Fitzgerald 132) Jimmy Gatz was the one who always dreamed of seeing
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Everybody’s past will always be what forms them what gives expression to their name. Most people will remember you by your name because they knew you from the past a past they lived with you. When people ask about you they think of your personality of what you were like in the past, of what gave character to your name. For example, Gatsby, his father remembers him as Jimmy Gatz because he was with him in his past, he knew all the goals he had for his future, and how he became the man he was because of that. His father knew he would be great he would be someone because of the hard worker he was, and that how he will remember his son. Not by Jay Gatsby the wealthy man, but by Jimmy Gatz his son who worked hard to strive for his goals and for a better future than what he would have if he stayed with his
In The Great Gatsby, a prominent underlying theme is self transformation, or the reinventing of oneself. Throughout the book Gatsby is not what he says he is. He made up his whole life story in order to impress a girl he falls in love with before he is sent off to war. Jay Gatsby sets out to completely reinvent himself in every way, starting with his name. Growing up in the midwest, he was James Gatz, son of poor a poor farmer. In the text, the characters that
Before Jay Gatsby was the picture of status and wealth, he was a poor college dropout from North Dakota. Born as James Gatz, he recreates himself into Jay Gatsby, a wealthy socialite, lying about his college years and upbringing to Nick Carraway and others. Gatsby recreates himself because of his shame about his
When the mischievous Tom Buchanan unveils the truth about Jay Gatsby’s past, whose real name appeared to be James Gatz, representing Gatsby as “Mr. nobody from nowhere”, Gatsby fails to find vindicate his actions and to find compelling evidence to convince Daisy in his equality with high society. Despite the fact that Daisy is totally aware of her husband’s infidelity she decides to continue her marriage, abandoning Gatsby heartlessly.
Jay Gatsby, the title character of The Great Gatsby, is really not all that the title might suggest. First of all, his real name is James Gatz. He changed it in an effort to leave behind his old life as a poor boy and create an entirely new identity. He is also a liar and a criminal, having accumulated his wealth and position by dishonest means. But he is still called ‘great,’ and in a sense he is. Gatsby is made great by his unfaltering hope, and his determination to live in a perfect world with Daisy and their perfect love. Gatsby has many visible flaws—his obvious lies, his mysterious way of avoiding straight answers. But they are shadowed over by his gentle smile and his visible hunger for an ideal future. The coarse and playful Jay
It is revealed that James Gatz created the persona of Jay Gatsby. As the novel continues it becomes apparent that James Gatz no longer exists and that Gatz has completely internalised Jay Gatsby making it his true identity. This appears to have damaging effects on Gatsby that we find out throughout the novel, however Gatsby appears to be in denial about these
Jay Gatsby, the title character of the novel is an incredibly wealthy young man, living in a medieval mansion in West Egg on an imaginary area of Long Island. Gatsby has many laudable traits. For example, he is filled with optimism and the ability to transform his dreams into reality. Jay is also extremely faithful to his true love, Daisy Buchanan, even to the point of death. When we first meet Gatsby, he is the aloof host of the fantastically opulent parties thrown every weekend at his mansion. It appears he is surrounded by wondrous luxury and is courted by beautiful women and the rich and powerful men of the time. Jay is also a very admirable character due to his status of wealth and being a hero of War World I, “In the Argonne Forest I took two machine gun detachments so far forward that there was half a mile gap on either side… I was promoted to be a major, and every Allied government gave me a decoration- even Montenegro”. However, Nick who narrates the book views Gatsby as a flawed man who is dishonest, deceitful, a liar, and a dreamer whom is searching for answers in the past, “he talked a lot about the past, and I gathered that he wanted to recover something, some idea of himself, perhaps, that had gone into loving Daisy… if he could once return to a certain starting place and go over it all slowly, he could find out what that thing was…”
Jay Gatsby also know as James Gatz has always had a dream for his life and that dream is to be wealthy and well-known. As James Gatz lived a poor and unhappy life; he built a new name for himself, Jay Gatsby. Once Jay Gatsby was well known to the people he found it harder to maintain his image as Jay Gatsby. Fitzgerald shows one of the struggles of deception through conversations between Gatsby and others, “I think he hardly knew what he was saying, for when I asked him what business he was in he answered, ‘That’s my affair,’ before he realized that it wasn’t an appropriate reply”. Through Jay Gatsby’s poor response while talking to Nick Carraway, Fitzgerald is able show the complications while deceiving others. Jay Gatsby is now
Let me tell you who I am, as you don't know at all about me. I am Jay Gatsby, son of a poor farmer who changed his fate with his hard work. I was the person who was never happy in having little, always dreamed for bigger and higher, like a god. At the age of 17, I changed my name from James Gatz to Jay Gatsby and learned the high-class manners from Dan Cody.
The transformation between James Gatz and Jay Gatsby is an example of how people can transform themselves according to their ambition for wealth and prosperity. The use of illegal activities to gain Gatsby's wealth is alluded to in the book, this shows the extent of how the American Dream circumvented the moral revulsion and pushed people who were crazy about money into crime - driving the moral standing of wealthier citizens into the ground. To Gatsby, his dream was symbolised by Daisy, Gatsby even says that her voice sounds like money, a direct correlation between Daisy and the wealth and happiness that Gatsby would supposedly enjoy if only he could have married Daisy but could still enjoy if he had married her five years later. His pursuit of happiness with Daisy was the ultimate cause of the degradation of Gatsby's morals and realistic dreams. This is because he held an unrealistic view of life and how he could recreate the past. His dreams had distorted reality to the point where when his rationality realised that the image of life and of Daisy did not coincide with the real life version his mind did not grasp that perhaps the dream had receded to the point of no return, consequently his dreams helped to
The character Gatsby, from F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby, exemplifies the idea of identity. Since Gatsby is ashamed of whom he really is, his attempt to hide his identity by hiding himself; however, it is impossible to change your identity because it is impossible to change the past, therefore they die as who they really are. Jay Gatsby 's real name is James Gatz; he had changed his name at the age of seventeen. He is originally from North Dakota. His parents worked as
Jay Gatsby also known as James Gatz has always had a dream for his life, and that dream is to be wealthy and well-known. As James Gatz lived a poor and unhappy life he decided to build a new name for himself as Jay Gatsby. Once well known as Jay Gatsby to others, he begins to struggle maintaining his image as Jay Gatsby. Fitzgerald shows one of the struggles of deception through conversations between Gatsby and others, “I think he hardly knew what he was saying, for when I asked him what business he was
“The Great Gatsby” is a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald set in the 1920’s and is a recollection of a man named Nick Carraway's memories of the summer he met Jay Gatsby the person he could not judge. Jay Gatsby changed the most throughout the novel because He started the novel as a rich and extravagant man with a mysterious background, but it was revealed that he didn't start his life this way, James Gatz was a seventeen-year-old fisherman on Lake Superior who had big dreams that he thought he never could make a reality. But he adopted a persona that modelled the ideal person through the eyes of a seventeen-year-old, and met his good companion and friend Mr. Dan Cody. But towards the end of the book the window that is Jay Gatsby is shattered
Jay Gatsby was viewed as a big dreamer and he has accomplished most of his dreams, but one. His idealistic vision of him and Daisy is an illogical concept that he has invested so much time into. He reinvented his whole life, changed his name, worked hard to earn the money, bought a house close to Daisy's, threw lavish parties just to achieve his dream to be with her. The only fault that ruined his plan was the fact that Gatsby lacked self knowledge and identity, which lead to deception throughout his life. In the novel, Nick Carraway illustrates his idea of Gatsby after he found out the truth about him.
Fitzgerald reveals the detrimental impacts of living in the past, through the character James Gatz and his numerous flashbacks responsible for Gatz’s development into the character of Jay Gatsby. Gatz invented the character of Gatsby, providing a fallacious back-story, in order to convince himself and hopefully Daisy that there remains a possibility of love despite their difference in economic backgrounds. Nick reveals, “So he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen-year-old boy would be likely to invent, and to this (Platonic) conception he was faithful to the end” (132). Gatsby changed his past, hoping to change the outcome of his future happiness. Fitzgerald reveals Gatsby’s construed misconception of himself through flashbacks in order to emphasize the effect the past has on the present.
Gatsby creates an identity for himself as a wealthy man, who lives a glamorous life by throwing huge parties, and is known by the most prestigious figures in New York. What the partygoers don’t realize is that the parties and his wealth is all in the hopes of rekindling with his love from the past, Daisy. In the novel The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald tells the story of a young man named Jay Gatsby, who came from nothing, and built up to be everything that he had hoped and dreamed of being. However, his one dream did not become a reality due to misfortunate events. All the money in the world couldn’t make Gatsby happy, as he died as his true self, not the identity he created for himself.