The American Dream in "The Great Gatsby" by F. S. Fitzgerald
The American Dream in "The Great Gatsby" by F. S. Fitzgerald
The American Dream in "The Great Gatsby" by F. S. Fitzgerald
Abstract
The paper is about the theory of the American dream that can be observed through
several characters: Jay Gatsby, George Wilson and Myrtle Wilson. Jay Gatsby
illustrates the very essence of the American dream according to which an individual
can succeed in society regardless of his own origin and history. In the world of
cheap, consumable ideals, rapaciousness and hypocrisy, Gatsby is a dreamer, idealist,
carried by illusions, he appears to be grotesque and absurd surrounded by greedy
people. In a symbolic sense, Gatsby shows Fitzgerald's consciousness of the
irreconcilability of money and beauty, ideal goals and corrupted methods, dreams
about personal happiness and the awareness of their fragility. Money is for
Fitzgerald the source of immense physical beauty, on the one hand, and evil, on the
other, so the two can not exist without being mutually dependent. The story about
the incurable idealist and impostor Gatsby who created and bolstered the myth
about his origin himself, becomes in this way a parable about the unhappy ending of
the great American dream.
Keywords: American dream, Gatsby, money, The Great Gatsby, success, happiness,
American society
He belongs to the generation of writers who were active after World War I,
the so-called “lost generation” that appeared directly as a post-war phenomenon,
since they didn't have roots in the pre-war culture.
The war affected America more than Europe (the period which was in history
marked by protests and prohibition), it opened a space for shady dealings and getting
rich quickly by individuals whose moral and intellectual characteristics weren't entirely
accepted by the society. The writers found it impossible to live in the world they had
returned to. Hopes of the young Americans were shaken by the war even more
because of the fact that it wasn't their war.
Young men felt a call to go to war by their noble, idealistic motives, but also
by a wish for adventure that has been so deeply rooted in the spirit of America.
Bašić says that “at that time, America was the embodiment of boredom and
provincialism for young people, but at the same time it left an open space for
unobstructed money making through prohibition” (338).
The writers realized that gods of tradition were dead, all wars had finished,
and the faith in people had been shaken.
His novel The Great Gatsby reflects the characteristics of works written in the
“jazz age” representing the imaginary portraits of young, glamorous representatives of
the rich class living their American dream based on money, success, happiness; their
lives cannot be touched by the hand of sorrow or tragedy. As suggested further,
“Only at first sight it appears to be short and simple fiction founded on a hardly
established artistic balance of huge and in the end, irreconciled contradictions“
(Leksikon svjetske književnosti, 695).
In the literary-historical period preceding The Great Gatsby, the authors put the
emphasis on the firmly and completely shaped composition that made it possible to
follow the story without difficulties, the author's objective attitude was implicit and
literary genres never blended.
The modernity of The Great Gatsby can be noticed in deeply ironical changes of
tragic and humorous, romantic and cinical, objective and completely subjective
narrative techniques that are balanced to perfectionism.
The plot is split by the movie episode technique that is like a puzzle so that
the reader finds out from every chapter a part of the riddle about Gatsby, and in the
end he obtains complete idea about him. (Bašić 418)
The chapters are short, formally and stilistically carefully polished. The
dramatic culmination is achieved in the middle of the novel, and the second part of
the novel brings the solution in which the classic catharsis fails to appear. Fitzgerald
destroys idealized dreams about quick success by killing Gatsby.
The basis of the novel is the theory of the American dream that can be
observed through several characters: Jay Gatsby, George Wilson and Myrtle Wilson.
Jay Gatsby illustrates the very essence of the American dream according to which an
individual can succeed in society regardless of his own origin and history; the theory
to be found at the end of the novel: “And as the moon rose higher the inessential
houses began to melt away until gradually I became aware of the old island here that
flowered once for Dutch sailors' eyes...” (Fitzgerald 187 ).
Making him visually different, Fitzgerald even symbolically points out that
newly acquired money and reputation haven't destroyed Gatsby's capability of
empathy and feelings; but they have detached him from the representatives of his own
class as even his servants are deriding him.
Ivana Nakić Lučić 71
The novel The Great Gatsby isn't completely based on the theory of naturalism
and the way of thinking of literary theoretician N. Boileao; a character's psychological
traits are analysed and it can be concluded that the character's actions are incited by
the milieu he belongs to and the time in which his actions take place, and not
exclusively by his genetic heritage.
Gatsby's antithesis is Tom Buchanan, the representative of the vieau riche who
inherit their money. Their characters are diametrically opposed. Although Gatsby is
intelectually a more superior character, Fitzgerald stresses that intelligence is of least
importance in the golden American society to which Gatsby aspires. The author
clearly portrays the representatives of the vieau riche as rasists and chauvinists who read
simple literature or don't read at all.
While Tom goes into a monologue about the domination of the white race in
Chapter 1, Fitzgerald actually symbolically anticipates the decay of the idealised rich
society by the working class and irony is more emphasized because Tom is saying it:
“Civilization's going to pieces...It's up to us, who are the dominant race, to watch out
or these other races will have control of things” (Fitzgerald 19).
72 International Journal of Languages and Literatures, Vol. 2(1), March 2014
The link between Gatsby and Tom is Daisy, a young and beautiful
representative of the vieau riche, who in her youth allowed herself an adventure with
poor Gatsby, but after five years realized what position assured her social acceptability
so she rejects love, tenderness and Gatsby's affection and stays with the cold, uncouth
and vulgar Tom.
Daisy reflects Fitzgerald's conviction that women are not allowed to compete
in the male world which can be inferred from her relationship with her daughter.
Superficially drawn as a shallow woman, completely dependent on her man, she in the
end proves to be a real representative of the rich class. Her crucial sentence is in
Chapter 1 pointing to the essence of society towards which all those engaged in the
American dream aspire – idle days: “What'll we plan?... What do people plan?”
(Fitzgerald 18).
In the end, the character of Gatsby supports the theory that an individual who
makes his way up to the top alone is predetermined to fail. Gatsby couldn't realize the
American dream of happiness because money and success weren't his goals, but only
the means by which he tried to regain Daisy's love. He can't find his place in the
American sun and become a part of the golden elite as he isn't able to give up love
which makes him human.
On the other hand, Tom and Daisy are typical representatives of the elitist,
capitalist society in its full blossom, which is built on the principle of hierarchy and
the precise defining of each representative's position in society. They sacrifice their
own empathy and become puppets led by a mass of idle, calculating individuals.
Having realised that he had been fooling himself in believing that rich Daisy
could finally love him, he decided to sacrifice his own life to save her. Through
Gatsby's conduct, Fitzgerald concludes that the American society, led by empty-
headed individuals, is built on unscrupulous, cold-blooded actions in which there is
no place for age-long, traditional values like empathy, love and the basic feelings -
feeling guilty and belief in doing the right thing.
Gatsby and Daisy were symbolically connected by the light between their
houses - the memory of the old love which only Gatsby tried to revive, and at the
moment when he couldn't see it anymore, he became aware of his defeat.
Ivana Nakić Lučić 73
He realizes that his rapture about the belief that the past can be changed
doesn't have any sense. In the stormy and bloody outcome Gatsby loses Daisy and
dies by the jealous husband's bullet. Tom and Daisy's corrupted, rich world destroys
Gatsby and continues to persist as if nothing had happened.
George is positioned between the vieau and nouveau riche, he is a part of the
American society that should keep the moral balance between the two extremities and
he dreams of leaving the unpromising valley of ashes and going to sunny California.
Wilson doesn't understand the absurdity of his own ambitions that are
inevitably condemned to fail in the capitalistic society, assuming more and more the
characteristics of animalism – food chain in which all values are totally turned upside
down. Ethically and morally more deformed individuals are the ones who survive
instead of those who are phisically more superior.
The only possibility of escape is money, and in his case money is the goal. His
dream of mutual happiness becomes a nightmare when he, because of his love for
Myrtle, in a hopeless attempt of revenging her death and confronting immoral rich
people, kills Gatsby, not knowing that he kills one of the representatives of his own
class who had the same dreams. Completely deranged, he commits suicide by the pool
- the symbol of rich and famous people, which makes his death grotesque. Like
Gatsby, George also decided to protect the woman he loved to the very end, without
taking into consideration the consequences. In the end he remains deserted, with the
destroyed dream of better life, like Gatsby he lost the light that had guided him
through life.
74 International Journal of Languages and Literatures, Vol. 2(1), March 2014
... and in a moment the thickish figure of a woman blocked out the light... She
was in the middle thirties, and faintly stout, but she carried her flesh sensuously...Her
face, above a spotted dress of dark blue crepe-de-chine, contained nofacet or gleam of
beauty, but there was an immediately perceptible vitality about her as if the nerves of
her body were continually smouldering. (Fitzgerald 31)
Fitzgerald built Myrtle's character as the symbol of the working class that is
condemned to bare survival, without real possibilities of quick progress. Every
attempt of making progress is deterred in advance, in Chapter 2 Tom suddenly slaps
Myrtle when she merely mentions Daisy's name, as the anticipation of the fate
awaiting her if she dares to persist in her intention, her American dream.
The author emphasizes the tragic quality of Myrtle's character; she dies under
the wheels of the car driven by Daisy, her body is deformed and mangled which
stresses the impossibility of making true the dream she aspired to.
3. Conclusion
The novel The Great Gatsby appeared in American literature in the period
when the writers of the “lost generation” were active; thus, the themes of novels are
deeply pessimistic taking into consideration the condition of society in America and
beyond at the time.
Ivana Nakić Lučić 75
Historically, the novel is the reflection of the consciousness of the final decay
of elitist social and ideological 19th-century standards and the establishment of a
modern age that abounds in promises and threat – democracy brings freedom, but
also new slavery, riots and uncertainty.
The “jazz age” during which Fitzgerald was active and in which his characters
existed is more a reflection of the condition of the spirit than of social reality.
Fitzgerald put the real and deceptive splendor of that world in a dramatic and tragic
confrontation within formally and morally balanced frames of the novel The Great
Gatsby which was inspired by symbolism.
Money is for Fitzgerald the source of immense physical beauty, on the one
hand, and evil, on the other, so the two can not exist without being mutually
dependent.The story about the incurable idealist and impostor Gatsby who created
and bolstered the myth about his origin himself, becomes in this way a parable about
the unhappy ending of the great American dream.
However, the author leaves the reader with a kind of green light giving him
hope for the possibility of making dreams true in the last sentence of the novel: “It
eluded us then, but that's no matter -to-morrow we will run faster, stretch out our
arms farther... And one fine morning...” (Fitzgerald 188).
76 International Journal of Languages and Literatures, Vol. 2(1), March 2014
References
Bašić, S. (1976). Povijest svjetske književnosti. Američki roman između dva rata.Vol. 6. Zagreb:
Školska knjiga.
Bašić, S. (2001). Nad ponorom moderne svijesti. Zagreb: Školska knjiga.
Fitzgerald, F. S. (1994). The Great Gatsby. London: Penguin Books.
Detoni-Dujmić, D. (Ed.). (2004). Leksikon svjetske književnosti: Djela. Zagreb: Školska knjiga.
Radeljković, Z. (2005). Fitzgeraldova Amerika: Veliki Gatsby. Central and Eastern European
Online Library.
Available: http://www.ceeol.com. (January 15, 2014)