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The Great Gatsby
While The Great Gatsby is a highly specific portrait of American society
during the Roaring Twenties, its story is also one that has been told
hundreds of times, and is perhaps as old as America itself: a man claws
his way from rags to riches, only to find that his wealth cannot afford
him the privileges enjoyed by those born into the upper class. The
central character is Jay Gatsby, a wealthy New Yorker of indeterminate
occupation. Gatsby is primarily known for the lavish parties he throws
every weekend at his ostentatious Gothic mansion in West Egg. He is
suspected of being involved in illegal bootlegging and other underworld
activities.
The narrator, Nick Carraway, is Gatsby s neighbor in West Egg. Nick is a
young man from a prominent Midwestern family. Educated at Yale, he has
come to New York to enter the bond business. In some sense, the novel is
Nick s memoir, his unique view of the events of the summer of 1922; as
such, his impressions and observations necessarily color the narrative
as a whole. For the most part, he plays only a peripheral role in the
events of the novel; he prefers to remain a passive observer.
Upon arriving in New York, Nick visits his cousin, Daisy Buchanan, and
her husband, Tom. The Buchanans live in the posh Long Island district of
East Egg; Nick, like Gatsby, resides in nearby West Egg, a less
fashionable area looked down upon by those who live in East Egg. West
Egg is home to the nouveau riche people who lack established social
connections, and tend to vulgarly flaunt their wealth. Like Nick, Tom
Buchanan graduated from Yale, and comes from a privileged Midwestern
family. Tom is a former football player, a brutal bully obsessed with
the preservation of class boundaries. Daisy, by contrast, is an almost
ghostlike young woman who affects an air of sophisticated boredom. At
the Buchanans s, Nick meets Jordan Baker, a beautiful, if boyish, young
woman with a cold and cynical manner. The two will later become
romantically involved.
Jordan tells Nick that Tom has been having an affair with Myrtle Wilson,
a woman who lives in the valley of ashes an industrial wasteland
outside of New York City. After visiting Tom and Daisy, Nick goes home
to West Egg; there, he sees Gatsby gazing at a mysterious green light
across the bay. Gatsby stretches his arms out toward the light, as
though to catch and hold it.
Tom Buchanan takes Nick into New York, and on the way they stop at the
garage owned by George Wilson the husband of Myrtle, with whom Tom has
been having an affair. Tom tells Myrtle to join them later in the city.
Nearby, on an enormous billboard, a pair of bespectacled blue eyes
stares down at the barren landscape. These eyes called the eyes of Dr.
T.J. Eckleburg once served as an advertisement; now, they brood over
all that happens in the valley of ashes.
In the city, Tom takes Nick and Myrtle to the apartment in Morningside
Heights that he keeps for his affair. There, they have a lurid party
with Myrtle s sister, Catherine, and an abrasive couple named McKee.
They gossip about Gatsby; Catherine says that he is somehow related to
Kaiser Wilhelm, the much-despised ruler of Germany during World War I.
The more she drinks, the more aggressive Myrtle becomes; she begins
taunting Tom about Daisy, and he reacts by breaking her nose. The party,
unsurprisingly, comes to an abrupt end.
Nick Carraway attends a party at Gatsby s mansion, where he runs in to
Jordan Baker. At the party, few of the attendees know Gatsby; even fewer
were formally invited. Before the party, Nick himself had never met
Gatsby: he is a strikingly handsome, slightly dandified young man who
affects an English accent. Gatsby asks to speak to Jordan Baker alone;
after talking with Gatsby for quite a long time, she tells Nick that she
has learned some remarkable news. She cannot yet share it with him,
however.
Some time later, Gatsby visits Nick s home and invites him to lunch. At
this point in the novel, Gatsby s origins are unclear. He claims to come
from a wealthy San Francisco family, and says that he was educated at
Oxford after serving in the Great War (during which he received a number
of decorations). However, a certain diffidence in his manner indicates
that he may be lying to Nick. At lunch, Gatsby introduces Nick to his
business associate, Meyer Wolfsheim. Wolfhsheim is a notorious criminal;
many believe that he is responsible for fixing the 1919 World Series.
Gatsby mysteriously avoids the Buchanans. Later, Jordan Baker explains
the reason for Gatsby s anxiety: he had been in love with Daisy Buchanan
when they met in Louisville before the war; Jordan subtly intimates that
he is still in love with her, and she with him.
Gatsby has Nick arrange a meeting between him and Daisy. Gatsby has
meticulously planned their meeting: he gives Daisy a carefully-rehearsed
tour of his mansion, and is desperate to exhibit his wealth and
possessions. Gatsby is wooden and mannered during this initial meeting;
his dearest dreams have been of this moment, and so the actual reunion
was bound to disappoint. Despite this, the love between Gatsby and Daisy
is revived, and the two begin an affair.
Eventually, Nick learns the true story of Gatsby s past. He was born
James Gatz in North Dakota, but had his name legally changed at the age
of seventeen. The gold baron Dan Cody served as Gatsby s mentor until
his death. Though Gatsby inherited nothing of Cody s fortune, it was
from him that Gatsby was first introduced to world of wealth, power, and
privilege.
While out horseback riding, Tom Buchanan happens upon Gatsby s mansion.
There he meets both Nick and Gatsby, to whom he takes an immediate
dislike. To Tom, Gatsby is part of the "new rich," and thus poses a
danger to the old order that Tom holds dear. Despite this, he
accompanies Daisy to Gatsby s next party; there, he is exceedingly rude
and condescending toward Gatsby. Nick realizes that Gatsby wants Daisy
to renounce her husband and her marriage; in this way, they can recover
the years they have lost since first they parted. This is Gatsby s great
flaw: his great love of Daisy is a kind of worship for him, she is
ideal, and this he fails to see her flaws. He believes that he can undo
the past, and forgets that Daisy s essentially small-minded and cowardly
nature was what initially caused their separation.
After his reunion with Daisy, Gatsby ceases to throw his elaborate
parties. The only reason he threw such parties was the chance that Daisy
(or someone who knew her) might attend. Daisy invites Gatsby, Nick and
Jordan to lunch at her house. In an attempt to make Tom jealous, and to
exact revenge for his affair, Daisy is highly indiscreet in her relation
to Gatsby. She even tells Gatsby that she loves him while Tom is in
earshot.
Though Tom is himself having an affair, he is furious at the thought
that his wife could be unfaithful to him. He forces the group to drive
into the city: there, in a suite at the Plaza Hotel, Tom and Gatsby have
a bitter confrontation. Tom denounces Gatsby for his low birth, and
reveals to Daisy that Gatsby s fortune has been made through illegal
activities. Daisy s real allegiance is to Tom: when Gatsby begs her to
say that she does not love her husband, she refuses him. Tom permits
Gatsby to drive Daisy back to East Egg; in this way, he displays his
contempt for Gatsby, as well as his faith in his wife s complete
subjection to him, Tom.
On the trip back to East Egg, Gatsby allows Daisy to drive in order to
calm her ragged nerves. Passing Wilson s garage, Daisy swerves to avoid
another car and ends up hitting Myrtle; she is killed instantly. Nick
advises Gatsby to leave town until the situation calms. Gatsby, however,
refuses to leave: he remains in order to ensure that Daisy is safe.
George Wilson, driven nearly mad by the death of his wife, is desperate
to find her killer; Tom Buchanan tells him that Gatsby was the driver of
the fatal car. Wilson who has decided that the driver of the car must
also have been Myrtle s lover shoots Gatsby before committing suicide
himself.
After the murder, the Buchanans leave town to distance themselves from
the violence for which they are responsible. Nick is left to organize
Gatsby s funeral, but finds that few people cared for Gatsby. Only Meyer
Wolfsheim shows a modicum of grief, and few people attend the funeral.
Nick seeks out Gatsby s father, Henry Gatz, and brings him to New York
for the funeral. From Henry, Nick learns the full scope of Gatsby s
visions of greatness and his dreams of self-improvement.
Thoroughly disgusted with life in New York, Nick decides to return to
the Midwest. Before his departure, Nick sees Tom Buchanan once more. Tom
tries to elicit Nick s sympathy; he believes that all of his actions
were thoroughly justified, and he wants Nick to agree.
Nick muses that Gatsby, alone among the people of his time, strove to
transform his dreams into reality; it is this that makes him "great."
Nick also believes, however, that the time of such grand aspirations is
over: greed and dishonesty have irrevocably corrupted both the American
dream and the dreams of individual Americans.
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