The theme of human corruption, its sources
and consenquences, is a coomon concern among
writers from
Shakespeare through J.D Salinger. Some suggest that it attacks from outside,
while
others depict
corruption occuring from within the individual. In the case if The Great Gatsby
and it's
protagonist's fate, Fizgerald shows both factors at work. The moral climate of
the
Roaring Twenties,
Daisy Fay Buchanan's pernicious hold on him, and Jay Gatsby's own nature all
contribute to his
tragic demise.
First, the loose morality of Dan Cody,
Gatsby's unfortunate role model, and superficial
people who flock
to Gatsby's parties contribute to Gatsby's downfall. Their examples encourages
Gatsby's
interpretation of The American Dream- his naive belief is that money and social
standing are all
that matter in his quest for Daisy. The self-absorbed debetants and their
drunken escorts
are among those who "crash" his extravagent soirees. As Nick Carroway
tells us,
"People were
not invited- they went there." (pg.40) Shallow, corrupt people like Jordan
Baker
gossip with
reckless abandon about their mysterious host. Their careless, superficial
attitudes
and wanton
behaviour represent Fizgarald's depiction of the corrupt American Dream.
Another force of corruption responsible for
Gatsby's fate is his obsession with a woman of
Daisy's nature.
Determined to marry her after returning from the war, he is blind to her
shallow,
cowardly nature.
He is unable to see the corruptiion whick lies beyond her physical beauty,
charming manner
and playful banter. That she is incapable of leaving her brutal husband, Tom,
of
commiting herself
to Gatsby despite his sacrifices, escapes him. As Nick observes, Gatsby's
expectation is
absuredly simple:"He only wanted her to tell him [Tom] that she never
loved him."
(pg.91) DAisy is
not worthy of the pedestal on which she is placed. Since she is hallow at the
core,
so is his dream
which is based on a brief flirtation, nothing more.
Finally, Gatsby's own character-especially
his willful obessesion-contributes to his fate.
Despite his
naivete about Daisy and her friends who "are rich and play polo
together," he, too, has
been seduced by
the lure of money and fame. Unable to control his obsessive desire to have
Dasiy, he
cares little
about the means by which he acquires the money to marry her. He associates with
known criminals
such as Myer Wolfsheim, apperars to be involved with bootlegging, and is
rumored to
have killed a
man. Finally, he lies about himself and his family to enlist Nick's support of
his
grand quest. The
means he uses to achieve his goal pervert his sacred dream. He prefers the
pretty
illusions he
concocts to the harsh reality of the obsession he allows to corrupt his life.
Gatsby's character is probably the single
most important factor in the story of his life and
death. But Daisy
and a society which rewards corruption play a part as well. F. Scott
Fizgerald's
depiction of the
soured American Dream dramatizes the internal and external forces at work in a
modern tragedy
about human potential for corruption
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