Preview

How Is Gatsby Successful

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
103 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
How Is Gatsby Successful
For his own American dream, Gatsby cooperation with the bootlegger Meyer Wolfsheim to sell the illegal trafficking in alcohol. Just a few years among Gatsby is becomes a “riches”. Gatsby's success does not because of his honest and diligent. After Gatsby died, his father came from his hometown to attend the funeral, he carries Gatsby's “schedule”. Gatsby strictly requires himself, hard to learn, exercise, and thrift. These are the traditional “American dream” requirements. However, the adult Gatsby did not fulfill the promise, in order to wealth and status, in order to regain the love of Daisy, Gatsby became a person doing illegal

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Gatsby builds his identity as a greater and alternate man—a man above an average man. He creates this rich yet calm and collected side of him. He's part of new money and so, worked his way to get to where he is at. Everything that lead him to become rich was all for Daisy. Like the many Americans at the time, he was more disillusioned on the idea that he could obtain his American dream—to have a house and own land. Fitzgerald suggests that the American dream is not attainable to everyone. He shows this through the valley of ashes; people like Myrtle and George who worked hard but couldn’t get rich. Even though Gatsby became rich, he ultimately couldn’t get Daisy who was his life ling dream.…

    • 502 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jay Gatsby always had the American Dream in his mind. Coming from a poor family with little wealth, Gatsby was not willing to accept this factor of his life. Mr. Gatsby’s only apparent aspect of success in the American Dream is the wealth he arrives at. The narrator states, “The truth was that Jay Gatsby of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself…So he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen-year-old boy would be likely to invent, and to this conception he was faithful to the end”(Fitzgerald 98). This fantasy Jay Gatsby creates becomes reality. He is the one man in West Egg who throws huge parties and is able to serve alcohol during prohibition, which gives people the notion, that Mr. Jay Gatsby is a wealthy man who seems to be living the American…

    • 954 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    As soon as the American dream is reached, through considerable hard work, many factors can obliterate everything that has been gained. Gatsby thinks that he has finally reached his dream, but right when he begins to feel comfortable with Daisy everything falls apart: “Gatsby, pale as death… was standing in a puddle of water glaring tragically into my eyes.”(86) Gatsby thinks that soon he will have what he has changed everything in his life to gain. Suddenly through Daisy’s change of heart Gatsby sees his life crumble again. The American dream that he devoted himself to goes from being fulfilled to lost in a matter of minutes. The American Dream can be cruel and at the best moment end. Gatsby thinks that all the people around him care for him but he finds that they are only using him: “filled with friends now gone forever.”(70) With all the parties Gatsby throws he believes that he continues to gain more friends. All the people that attend the parties are only there for entertainment not because they care about Gatsby. Gatsby believes that his dreams of having high social and economic status have finally been…

    • 1475 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Scott Fitzgerald of “The Great Gatsby”, gives his readers signs on why Gatsby will not reach fail and lost his mind in a fantasy world, insisting himself to relive the past life with his former love Daisy. Even though Gatsby is blinded by his past, he is able to gain the American Dream, to obtain the wealth and power to win Daisy’s heart back. Although he has forgotten, it has been five years since he has reunited with Daisy. When time passes, memories are made and decisions are formed to each individual's future and the Daisy he once knew he no longer can comprehend, because of his unrealistic dream. In addition, Gatsby’s does not give up and his desires do come to life when Nick brings them together, and a bond is connected not from true love but from the aspect of materialism. Lastly, Gatsby’s real life has been reviled by Tom who was jealous of his wealth and due to the pressure Daisy detached herself from the situation. Gatsby has failed to relive his past, because even though she had loved him Daisy will love wealth and social class she belongs to.…

    • 683 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Daisy’s representation of the failure American Dream is portrayed as an illusion of Gatsby’s, one that he tries to…

    • 753 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gatsby a man of tremendous wealth and power could have chosen anybody to be his wife he wanted Daisy. Although he failed to see that part of his attraction to her was because of what she represented for him: money and the upper class. In a way, Gatsby believes that if he can get her to love him, he can prove to himself that he belongs to the upper class. Though he learns too late that both Daisy, and, therefore, the American Dream, are unreachable goals. In conclusion, Gatsby follows the American Dream model to a point and is a perfect candidate for representing it. Though not in the storybook happy ending version, Fitzgerald wanted to show how hollow the idea of the American Dream is and how even if it is obtained its outcome would not be anything that a person would necessarily want which, in this case, was…

    • 686 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Since the beginning, Gatsby knew that to attain the American Dream he would have to create the persona of Jay Gatsby from James Gatz. Jay Gatsby is a rich, successful man from West Egg in New York while James Gatz is the penniless son of unsuccessful farm people. Evidently, Gatsby grasps that to attain the American Dream he absolutely can not be a lower class laborer and must be born affluent. In addition, Gatsby is revealed as a hard worker when his father presents a schedule that exhibits, “‘Jimmy was bound to get ahead’” (Fitzgerald 173). He refers to the anal schedule of self-improvement Gatsby grinded himself through. However, it is also revealed Gatsby earned his money through illegal activities when Meyer Wolfsheim, a mob leader, tells the narrator, “‘Start him! I made him’” (Fitzgerald 173). This exposes that Gatsby believs that in order to create the American Dream from nothing, integrity is impossible. In the end of the novel, everything is taken away from Gatsby when he is murdered by another victim of the hopeless American Dream, Wilson. Evidently, Daisy and her husband, Tom Buchanan, two people of privilege, can be linked to the intricate events leading to Gatsby’s downfall. Therefore, Fitzgerald reveals that all of Gatsby’s hard work and his own life was obliterated by the elite who were born into the American…

    • 773 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Instead, they live their lives in such a way as to perpetuate their sense of superiority — however unrealistic that may be. Yet, Gatsby is totally blinded by this perception and tries desperately to fake his status, even buying “British shirts” and claiming to have attended Oxford in an attempt to justify his position in society. Gatsby is influenced by the eastern society and thrives to obtain their status by throwing lavish parties in which he uses his “Rolls-Royce as an omnibus” to attract individuals from all over Long Island; the “newly rich” but also those of antediluvian wealth. His display of his excessive amount of money is an attempt to pave a bridge to be accepted by those who have an aristocratic pedigree and in order to acquire Daisy to pronounce her love for him. However, Gatsby fails to recognize that no amount of new money can be used to buy an entry into the exclusive, “a rather distinguished secret society”, upper class. Despite Gatsby’s effortful and relentless attempts to break into the next level of the hierarchy, he is always shunned away and this begs to differ if the American Dream is just an illusionary…

    • 527 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many people say wealth is the key to measuring success; they are wrong. Success should be measured upon ones happiness, the friends one has and if their goals in life have been attained. It is like saying you can never buy happiness. The American dream is often considered being affluent, but once one becomes rich- if ever- that's all he ever gains and won't be truly happy or successful. This is confirmed time after time again in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and in other readings and movies; it has in all probability been proven in your own experiences also. Success is like a rubber-band ball where you keep building and building upon it in hopes to make it a truly grand item to boast.…

    • 764 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Including his personal relationships and others as well. In the novel it shows of Daisy and Tom’s relationship together as Gatsby is involved between them more negative and leads to Tom investigating him into who he is and what he does. Gatsby presence and gaining of wealth intrigues Daisy which leads to tom inspiring different problems and lead towards Gatsby’s downfall as the man on top. Gatsby’s involvement in bootlegging creates the human aspects of corruption and jealousy. Both of which led to the event of Gatsby not fulling his goal in life. For the reason is that both create multiple new problems that show the negative way of achieving the American dream is the worst…

    • 692 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In his novel the Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald creates Gatsby as a character who becomes great. His life being as just an ordinary, lower-class, citizen, yet Gatsby still has a dream of becoming wealthy man. After meeting Daisy, he has a reason to strive to become prominent. Throughout his life, Gatsby gains the title of truly being great.…

    • 1244 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The word great has many meanings – outstanding, eminent, grand, important, extraordinary, noble, etc. - and varies along with the intent of the speaker and on the interpretation of the hearer. Someone may perceive something as great, and yet someone else may see that same thing as horrendous. The greatness of a being is not determined by themselves, but by those around them who experience, and perceive, their greatness through actions and words. In the book, “The Great Gatsby”, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, it is the narrator, Nick, who judges Gatsby as a great person with a “gorgeous” personality. It is his way of perceiving Gatsby that leads us to also find him “great”. Gatsby, through his actions, his dreams and…

    • 1124 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Dreams and goals, they are what people's daily lives are derived from. Dreams are what people strive to achieve and a failure to achieve a dream consequently leads to a void in someone's heart. If someone cannot achieve their dream , they are guilt-ridden until they achieve their dream. Gatsby is the perfect representation of someone who fails to achieve their dreams and yearns to try again. Fitzgerald makes Gatsby stand out of all the characters, this helps communicate his message about people's failure to accomplish their dreams. Fitzgerald Communicates that people are so blinded by their ambitions of achieving their dreams , they lose sight of what is going on around them. Gatsby sacrifices his status along with his wealth to win…

    • 787 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jay Gatsby achieved the American Dream by the devotion he has for his love, Daisy. The American Dream can be achieved by becoming rich and successful, from starting with nothing. Gatsby didn’t realize himself that he seized the American Dream, only to care for his love’s approval. He couldn’t “win” his love’s heart five years prior, because he was a “poor boy.” Taking chances and achieving goals, took Gatsby further than he imagined. Allowing his love for Daisy, blind him, the consequence have finally caught up to him.…

    • 1074 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Even with immense wealth, Gatsby’s life is haunted by a lack of meaningful relationships along with a distorted view of Daisy and the rest of the world; these weaknesses make him a fragmented character, acting as an example of the disillusionment of many people aiming for the American Dream…

    • 1045 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays