Love: Gatsby & Wilson Throughout the novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby’s unrequited love for Daisy is evident, as well as George Wilson’s love for his wife, Myrtle. Unlike Gatsby, Wilson is the least important character in the novel due to his important role in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s unique plot scheme that led to Gatsby’s murder. However, both characters have similarities and differences the reader is incapable of detecting due to Wilson’s brief mentions in chapter two and seven. Gatsby and Wilson’s love is similar due to their love murdering them both and their affection by remaining loyal to their women, but Gatsby was more ambitious to obtain a wealthy girl like Daisy and Wilson was forcing Myrtle to move west. When a devastated Wilson locates the “murderer” of his wife, Gatsby, after walking from his garage to Gatsby’s mansion, he shoots Gatsby and commits suicide right after. With little ripples that were hardly the shadows of waves, the laden mattress moved irregularly down the pool. A small gust of wind that scarcely corrugated the surface was enough to disturb its accidental course in its accidental burden. The touch of a cluster of leaves revolved it slowly, tracing, like the leg of a transit, a thin red circle in the water. It was after we started with Gatsby toward the house that the gardener saw Wilson’s body a little way off in the grass, and the holocaust was complete. (Fitzgerald 162) Both Wilson and Gatsby loved a woman who was intrigued by Tom Buchanan
Although people may seem like they are completely different, they can have many similarities. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson and Jay Gatsby seem like they are completely different, but they actually go through some similar events. Both Myrtle and Gatsby have goals of acquiring money and being accepted into the lifestyle of the upper class lifestyle that the Buchanans were living and ended up falling victim to them. However, Gatsby’s goal of being accepted was to be accepted by Daisy while Myrtle’s was purely for money. Although Gatsby and Myrtle appear to be vastly different people, they are actually quite similar.
You may ask, “Who would do such a thing, killing a innocent man?” “And, on top of that to kill him in his beautiful home?” Well I have the answer for you ladies and gentleman. The person guilty of this monstrous crime is Tom Buchanan. Tom Buchanan is brute, imperious, and just like his wife Daisy he is a careless man; crushing and destroying lives in his path. As well, Tom is a cheater; let's not forget he’s having an affair with another woman: Myrtle wilson. Above all Tom Buchanan is a killer. Today I will be presenting several pieces of evidences that Tom is at fault for the death of Mr. Jay Gatsby.
In the final few chapters we finally get to see Gatsby’s true colors. We see that Gatsby is expressing love towards Daisy when they all decide to go to New York for the day. Tom becomes suspicious and accuses Gatsby of having an affair with his wife and also being a bootlegger. Gatsby tells Tom that he and Daisy love one another and that they are going to be together like they once were in the past. Gatsby was wrong and Daisy ends up staying with Tom. Myrtle Wilson is then ran over by Daisy but Gatsby says that he will take the blame and ends up getting shot. At the beginning of this novel we thought that Gatsby was a well liked, popular guy, but it turns out that no one shows up to attend his funeral.
Third Body: The final way that F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays Gatsby as a modernist tragic hero is through his
He was a poor man who worked in a repair shop for cars. Mr.wilson represents the lower class of the 1920s especially after the market crash. Although he was not part of the upper class, money took a toll on Mr. Wilson. Wilson eventually found out about Myrtle having an affair, although he's not sure who the mister is. After the realization of his wife's affair, he plans to move west, and in doing so, he keeps Myrtle locked up until they move out. Myrtle manages to escape, but gets hit by a car, more specifically, Gatsby's car. Daisy was the one on driving Gatsby's car and only Gatsby knew that she had killed Myrtle. Her death is a symbol of everyone's corruption even Mr. Wilson because he became envious of her affair with a rich man, since he himself was not
However, while two deaths is certainly a terrible situation, it is nowhere near the level of mass genocide that a holocaust denotes, suggesting that something else, along with Wilson and Gatsby, dies in this scene. Much like how Wilson’s dream of moving to the west with his wife is no longer possible considering both of their deaths, Gatsby’s dream of Daisy’s love is also long gone with his death. Alone in the pool, Gatsby lies motionless and unprotected, as if he is accepting of the end of his dream and whatever remains in store for him, finally at ease with his internal struggles. Truthfully, the holocaust of this scene not only references the deaths of both Wilson and Gatsby, but also the loss of Gatsby’s dream in the process—a tragic situation indeed. After Gatsby’s death, understandably, the thought of his lost friend remains in Nick’s mind. However, Nick remains abstinent from the truth about Gatsby and the death of his dreams, claiming that Gatsby’s dreams still linger in the air despite his passing. Nick now “sp[ends his] Saturday nights in New York, because those gleaming, dazzling parties of his [are] with [him] so vividly that [he can] still hear the music and the laughter, faint and incessant, from his garden, and the cars going up and down his drive” (179). Gatsby’s extravagant parties were a product of his dreams for Daisy. He put them on in hopes she would
As Dwayne Johnson, a well-known American actor, once said, “Success isn't always about greatness. It's about consistency. Consistent hard work leads to success. Greatness will come” (Johnson). The protagonist of Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby is Nick Carraway, a Minnesota man in his mid-twenties. At the beginning of the novel, Nick moves to New York in search of the American Dream. Nick’s new house happens to be next door to the great Jay Gatsby, a wealthy man just a few years older than Nick. Nick’s cousin, Daisy, lives across the bay in East Egg. Nick travels to see Daisy and learns a lot about Daisy and Tom’s relationship. At one of Gatsby’s elegant parties, Gatsby asks Nick to arrange a tea party with Daisy and then he will happen to come by. The two rekindle their love for each other and then decide to travel into town. In town Tom confronts Gatsby on his illegal fortune and causes tension. Daisy is angry and will not let Gatsby explain so the two drive back to West Egg where Myrtle happens to be running out into the street. When Tom passes through with Nick and Jordan, Tom finds that Myrtle has been killed. He is saddened and talks to George Wilson, Myrtle’s husband. George is very angry and out to kill whomever killed his Myrtle. Tom blames Gatsby for running over Myrtle and therefore finds and kills Gatsby at his mansion. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby remains true to his friend Nick, his true love, and his dreams.
The dramatic increase intensifies when Daisy overrides his husband’s paramour, Myrtle Wilson. Retaining his complete and unwavering loyalty to Daisy, Gatsby takes the blame upon himself, while Daisy is conspiring with her husband in the
The 1920s is the decade in American history known as the “roaring twenties.” Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby is a reflection of life in the 1920s. Booming parties, prominence, fresh fashion trends, and the excess of alcohol are all aspects of life in the “roaring twenties.”
In the novel, The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, many of the characters live in an illusory world and only some can see past this. In the novel, West Egg and its residents represent the newly rich, while East Egg represents the old aristocracy. Gatsby seeking the past, Daisy is obsessed with material things, Myrtle wanting Tom to escape her poverty, George believing that T.J. Eckleburg is God, and Tom believing he is untouchable because of his power and wealth are all examples of the illusion v. reality struggle in the novel and Nick, the only character aware of reality, witnesses the fall of all the characters around him to their delusions.
As seen with the aforementioned example, Wilson also plays a role that involves parallelism. His situation parallels Tom's, as both have their wives being stolen. His situation parallels Gatsby's in both their idealization of Myrtle and Daisy, respectively. Both of these patterns serve to emphasize the character flaws in Tom and Gatsby and ultimately in the superficial lifestyle presented in the novel.
George though Gatsby was having an affair with his wife so he shoots and kills
Even though there are clear external differences between Jay Gatsby and George Wilson, there are also similarities between them. First off, both Gatsby and Wilson seek women that are romantically involved with Tom. Even though Wilson is already married to his woman, Gatsby goes on having an affair. They both want acceptance of these women and they both come from a very working-class background. They both want recognition of these women, and they both come from the background of the working class itself. Wilson is working for an honest life trying to stretch every dollar, Gatsby working illegally, regularly throwing away money.
Good morals and values are considered to be good qualities in most people’s perspective. In Fitzgerald’s, morality is something that many characters lack. Murder, bootlegging, and adultery are all traits that the characters in the novel possess. Myrtle Wilson is one of the two characters that is murdered in the story. In this conversation between Nick and Gatsby, “’Well, I tried to swing the wheel—‘ He broke off and suddenly I guessed the truth. ‘Was Daisy driving?’ ‘Yes’” Gatsby reveals the truth about who was driving (Fitzgerald 143). This proves that Daisy was driving when Myrtle was hit and killed. Gatsby is also murdered in the story. George Wilson, Myrtle’s husband, kills Gatsby because he is told that Gatsby is who killed his wife. Hickey writes, “He shot Gatsby and killed himself,” talking about George when he goes to Gatsby’s house in pursuit to Murder Gatsby (4). This proves that George murdered Gatsby.
An Austrian physician by the name of Sigmund Freud, a well renowned psychologist, aside from his studies, was once rumored do have done enough cocaine to kill a baby horse. Other than his cocaine addiction he also developed the theory of Psychoanalysis, which in short means that he studied the longstanding difficulties in the ways that people think and feel about themselves, the world, and their relationships with others. Sigmund Freud’s ideals of psychoanalysis was translated to in a way where we are able to analyze media in all it’s shapes and forms. Psychoanalytic media analysis argues that literary texts, like dreams, express the secret unconscious desires and anxieties of the characters within a movie, and the literary work is a manifestation of the Id, Super-Ego, and Ego. The text that I will analyze using the psychoanalytic media theory will be the film The Great Gatsby, originally a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald. I will be using Freud’s primary psychoanalytic theory of the ID, Ego, and Super-Ego to analyze the movie The Great Gatsby, and also analyze the potential cultural and societal impacts of an authors use of psychoanalytic theory.