If you knew that your husband was cheating on you, would you leave him? Do you believe it would be right for him to judge you for being with another man while he himself is with other women? For these reasons and a few more, it can be argued that Daisy Buchanan should leave her husband, Tom Buchanan, for Jay Gatsby. Tom Buchanan is racist, misogynistic, and full of himself. He believes it is perfectly reasonable for him to cheat on his wife, but if she has another man on the side, then she is at fault. Daisy’s love interest, Jay Gatsby, truly adores her and has sought after her for the past five years. He has planned out his every action around the hopes that he will get to meet Daisy again and their love will continue to flourish. Daisy would…
Scott Fitzgerald's character Daisy Buchanan in the novel The Great Gatsby is a perfect illustration of a woman in the 1920s. Married to a wealthy man, Daisy is portrayed as a stereotypical house wife with her good looks and aristocratic life style. Daisy is in love with her husband's money and the simplicity and luxury of her living. It is wondered if Daisy is like a role model in this novel, but throughout the novel, she is perceived to be ditsy, boring, and an adulteress to Gatsby. Fitzgerald offers a suggestion to his readers about the blend of her personalities in this quote from the novel, "She's got an indiscreet voice. It's full of-" I hesitated. "Her voice is full of money." He goes on to say that like money, her voice seems to offer everything, but she's born to disappoint and that she is a person better to dream about than to actually possess.' Daisy like most women of the 1920s, doesn't know the means of a true relationship in the sense that she thinks the only way to attract a man or a man of wealth is to have good looks and a shallow personality, just like she has perfected. When talking to her baby daughter, Daisy says, "I hope she'll be a foolthat's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool." In reality Fitzgerald has shown us that she is self-reflecting on herself and possibly all women of the time, by being beautiful little…
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about a man named Jay Gatsby, who…
In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby, Daisy Buchanan is portrayed as untouchable, purified, and innocent. As described Daisy sounds untouchable, Nick expresses that Daisy’s voice sounds like it belongs to someone “high in a white palace, the king’s daughter, the golden girl”(). Daisy is admired by many in this novel, and is the girl most men wanted. However, Daisy married Tom Buchanan, and they also have a daughter Pammy. Daisy is the second cousin of Nick Carraway. Also she is the object of Gatsby’s love interest.…
Daisy Buchanan, formerly known as Ms. Fay, or who could have been known as Mrs. Gatsby, is the wife of Tom Buchanan, the lover of Jay Gatsby, and the second cousin of Nick Carraway. She has a thrilling, magnetic voice which shows excitement and usually dresses in white clothing. She has dark, shining hair with bright eyes and a passionate mouth. She is from a wealthy family in Louisville, Kentucky where all the officers in war were in love with her due to her beauty and popularity. In 1917 she met and fell in love with Jay Gatsby where he was stationed at Camp Taylor. Zelda Fitzgerald, the wife of the author of The Great Gatsby, has a similar backstory. At the age of 18, she met F.Scott Fitzgerald in Montgomery, Alabama where he was stationed…
In the story her voice was a symbol of her personality, when the narrator describes her of having a “voice full of money”. Unfortunately, her love of money drove her to finally decide in marrying Tom, again focusing on money and building a superficial relationship. On the outside, Daisy is fresh and pure just like the flower she is named after. However, in reality she is just like money in that she promises more than she gives. Thanks to her ambition, carelessness was very present in her person. Money drove her crazy; taking her to live an unhappy life because of it. By returning with Tom, and by not assisting to Gatsby’s funeral it clearly shows the lack of feelings she has and a person that is…
In The Great Gatsby there are both admirable and despicable characters. Daisy Buchanan lives in East Egg, which is the place in town where all the people with old money live. Daisy Buchanan is the most despicable character in the book. She gives herself the traits of being careless and selfish. Daisy can be described as a selfish woman because she only cares about herself and money. Gatsby can be considered the most admirable character in the book. Jay Gatsby is a wealthy young man who lives across the harbor in West Egg, where all the nouveaux riche people live. He can be considered a selfless man because instead of living his life for himself, he lives it to impress Daisy. Gatsby can also be considered a loving and innocent man. In Fitzgerald`s The Great Gatsby, Gatsby…
Fitzgerald uses Tom’s characteristics and actions within Tom and Daisy’s relationship to convey negative feelings about his character to the reader. Their relationship involves Tom abusing and shouting at Daisy creating an instant dislike to him. Daisy accuses Tom of ill-treating her saying “I know you didn’t mean to, but you did do it. That’s what I get for marrying a brute of a man, a great, big, hulking physical specimen of a ——”. The fact his own wife described him as having a bully like appearance suggests he doesn’t possess the attributes of a pleasant person especially when compared to the way Daisy describes other people she loves like Gatsby who to her resembles "the advertisement of the man” implying through the symbolism that Gatsby is a flawless man in every way which reflects the modernity of the age.…
Daisy Buchanan is a questionable character who, in ways, lets the reader down. Quickly, the author reveals Daisy’s character when he announces that Tom, Daisy’s husband, has “some woman in New York” (Fitzgerald 15). This news is startling because Daisy knows about the other woman. At this point, the reader can start to wonder what kind of person Daisy is for having knowledge of the affair, but doing absolutely nothing about it. At first the reader could see Daisy as this beautiful, elegant woman, but is then let down given the fact that Daisy is doing nothing about her husband’s affair.…
Money is the top priority in Daisy’s life. “I’m glad it’s a girl. And I hope she’ll be a fool-that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” (22). Here she suggests that women need to be foolish in that era, which is cruel to women and requires women to be just satisfied with money, which is the only thing can prove them and give them happiness. So for money, Daisy chooses being a fool and accepts her fate to marry Tom. In the town’s meeting, Daisy claims that she loves Gatsby now but she loves Tom once too (126). Gatsby has money now not in the past. Daisy completely tells everyone everything she cares is…
Tom, her husband, commits unworthy actions that a husband should not do, but is very wealthy. Instead of being with a man who she truly desires to be with, she would rather be with a man that had more money from the beginning. In an argumentative discussion, Daisy communicates to Gatsby that she “did love [Tom] once but [she] loves him too” (140). Since Daisy is torn between the concept of money and love, she does not know who she desires to be with. However, a physical interaction between Gatsby and Daisy made Gatsby’s “heart beat faster and faster as Daisy’s white face came up to his own”(117). This shows that Daisy does have an attraction towards Gatsby, but prefers the benefits she receives by being married to Tom. If she was pure and innocent as her white colored face, she would not use her husband for…
First of all, Daisy Buchanan is an example of how character portrays them to other character than what they really feel and create an illusion. Daisy leads on Gatsby twice in the novel. When Gatsby leaves to fight in the war under the impression that Daisy will wait for his return but instead she breaks that illusion and marries Tom. Later on in the novel she again had Gatsby believing that Daisy will leave Tom for him. But that illusion comes to an end when she admits that she can’t tell Tom that she never loved Tom…
He believes he can fully accomplish this by winning the love of Daisy Buchanan, Tom Buchanan’s wife, whom Gatsby explains he has longed to be with for years. “Well, there I was, way off my ambitions, getting deeper in love every minute, and all of a sudden I didn’t care” (Fitzgerald 111). Gatsby is so infatuated with Daisy, and the idea of having her affluent life that attaining her becomes one of the only things he can focus on. This enthralling created his dream of a perfect life with her. Gatsby’s numerous attempts to catch Daisy's attention display his determination to achieve success and his naivety to it.…
She is mesmerized by his wealth as she enters his dressing room saying, "They're such beautiful shirts," she sobbed, her voice muffled in the think folds. "It makes me sad because I've never seen such--such beautiful shirts before" (Fitzgerald 92; ch.5). Daisy is overcome with two things that she has never experienced at the same time: wealth and love. Tom has the money but he does not treat her like a woman should be treated. Finally, she is in the presence of a man who has the money, but only cares about making her life complete. Person agrees and disagrees with this thought. "She is victim first of Tom Buchanan's "cruel" power, but then of Gatsby's increasingly depersonalized vision of her," he states (250). He agrees that she is very mistreated by Tom, but then later describes the way Gatsby mistreats her by saying "She becomes the unwitting "grail" in Gatsby's adolescent quest to remain ever-faithful to his seven-year-old conception of himself" (250). Person is trying to say that Gatsby does not truly love Daisy and that he is just using her to fuel his growing…
Surrounded by wealth from a young age, Daisy leads a privileged lifestyle that has instilled in her an air of carelessness when it comes to dealing with real-life issues. After the birth of her daughter, she comments, “I hope she’ll be a fool—that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” (17). This personal philosophy that it is best for a girl to be a “beautiful little fool” is one prevalent in many of her decisions throughout The Great Gatsby. Instead of facing her love for Gatsby, she marries Tom, an aristocrat with a penchant for infidelity. When she is confronted by Gatsby five years later, she plays the “beautiful little fool” yet again by blindly remaining with her unfaithful husband. Ultimately, she turns a blind eye to the reality of her poor decisions when it comes to love, and remains forever preoccupied with the hope of finding happiness in the lap of…