F. Scott Fitzgerald brilliantly wrote many novels as well as short stories. One of his best known works is The Great Gatsby. In the novel, the main character Jay Gatsby tries to obtain his lifetime dreams: wealth and Daisy Buchanan.
Throughout the story, he works at achieving his goals while overcoming many obstacles. Fitzgerald’s plot line relies heavily on accidents, carelessness, and misconceptions, which ultimately reveal the basic themes in the story. During the book, Fitzgerald is able to create a superior storyline by tying all the events in the story, directly or indirectly, together. Ernest Lockridge notes in his criticisms about the book: Yet in a triumph of art, Fitzgerald makes even accidents seem un accidental, he incorporates ‘real’ disorder within fictional order. He accomplishes this by repetition (in the ‘real’ world, repetition does not exist): the accident involving Tom and the chambermaid, the reference to both Nick and Jordan baker as ‘bad drivers,’ the wreck just outside Gatsby’s driveway after his party in which, as in Tom’s accident, a wheel is ripped off, the hit-and-run death of Myrtle Wilson, and finally the accidental conjunction of events which leads to Gatsby’s murder and Wilson’s suicide.
Lockridge, 7 Fitzgerald is capable of picking an event and referring back to it while still staying on topic. One of these events is accidents. Almost every character is related to an accident that occurs to another character: You see, when we [Gatsby and Daisy] left New York she was very nervous and she thought it would steady her to drive-and this woman [Myrtle Wilson] rushed out at us just as we were passing a car coming the other way. It all happened in a minute, but it seemed to me that she wanted to speak to us, thought we were somebody she knew. Well, first Daisy turned away from the woman toward the other car, and then she lost her nerve and turned back. The second my hand reached the wheel I felt shock-it must have killed her instantly.
The Term Paper on Great Gatsby Fitzgerald Scott Zelda
Dreaming The Impossible Dream: An autobiographical portrayal of F. Scott Fitzgerald as Jay Gatsby, in The Great Gatsby Frances Scott Key Fitzgerald, born September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota, is seen today as one of the true great American novelists. Although he lived a life filled with alcoholism, despair, and lost-love, he managed to create the ultimate love story and seemed to pinpoint the ...
Gatsby; 151 As one of the main accidents in the story, Fitzgerald connects the death of Myrtle Wilson to Daisy. The connection is completely accidental, because Daisy does not know that Myrtle is her husband’s mistress. In this incident, Fitzgerald is able to create irony between the two characters to make one think that it was actually not an accident, when in reality it was. During the course of the story, it is relevant that some of the characters in the book use careless actions. Unlike Gatsby, Tom and Daisy were born into money, and they never had to work for the luxuries they are able to enjoy. Robert Ornstein states his opinion about Tom and Daisy in one of his articles, “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy, selfish, destructive, and capable of anything except human sympathy” (59).
Nick, the narrator, had a similar outlook on the couple, as well, “They are careless people-they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together and let other people clean up the mess they had made… .” (187).
Tom and Daisy are capable of being careless and making mistakes because they have money to back them up. They do dumb things that would normally have bad consequences and are able to act like they have done nothing wrong because of this. Throughout the whole book misconceptions can be sited, but they are more commonly picked out towards the ending. The death of both Gatsby and Wilson is the most easily understood example of a misconception.
In a literary criticism, James E. Miller briefly describes why he thinks Gatsby’s death was a mistake, “Gatsby’s gorgeous cream-colored car is also the indirect cause of his own death, as it is the imprint of the fantastic car on his excited brain that enables Wilson (through Tom Buchanan) to track Gatsby down and shoot him (erroneously, of course) for killing Myrtle” (119).
The Essay on Tainted Dream Gatsby Daisy Fitzgerald
The 1920 s was a time of excess and growth. Economically, it was a time for great financial gain. Largely because of improvements in technology, productivity increased while overall production costs decreased, and the economy grew. Not only was this time filled with prosperity, but corruption as well. People finally acquired leisure time, and it was filled with gluttony and lust. Many authors ...
Wilson does not know that Gatsby was not the one who really killed Myrtle; it was Daisy. If Wilson had known this, Gatsby would have lived. Also, Wilson may have spared Daisy as well as himself. Instead, he takes matters into his own hands, “It was after we started with Gatsby [his dead body] toward the house that the gardener saw Wilson’s body a little way off in the grass, and the holocaust was complete” (170).
Without misconceptions, Daisy would be revealed as the true “murderer,” and the story’s plot would change. In conclusion, Fitzgerald is able to write an interesting plot line based on several areas of fault people have. Accidents are common occurrences within the story. They help relate the characters together. Tom and Daisy’s careless actions as well as the other character’s careless actions are found throughout the novel portraying how selfish and destructive wealthy people can be. Lastly, misconceptions help develop Fitzgerald’s plot line by causing a sequence of events that are “accidentally” caused by “careless people.” Works Cited Fitzgerald, F.
Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York; Scribner. 2003.
Lockridge, Ernest. ” Introduction.” Twentieth Century Interpretations of The Great Gatsby: A Collection of Critical Essays. Ed. Ernest Lockridge. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: 1968. 1-18.
Miller Jr. , James E. “Images of Death.” Readings on F. Scott Fitzgerald. Ed.
Bruno Leone. San Diego: Greenhaven, 1998. 118-121. Ornstein, Robert. “Scott Fitzgerald’s Fable of East and West Egg.” Readings on F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Ed. Bruno Leone. San Diego: Greenhaven, 1998. 53-62.