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- - The title character and protagonist of the
novel, Gatsby is a fabulously wealthy young man living in a Gothic mansion
in West Egg. He is famous for the lavish parties he throws every Saturday
night, but no one knows where he comes from, what he does, or how he made
his fortune. As the novel progresses, Nick learns that Gatsby was born James
Gatz on a farm in North Dakota; working for a millionaire made him
dedicate his life to the achievement of wealth. When he met Daisy while
training to be an officer in Louisville, he fell in love with her. Nick
also learns that Gatsby made his fortune through criminal activity, as he
was willing to do anything to gain the social position he thought
necessary to win Daisy. Nick views Gatsby as a deeply flawed man,
dishonest and vulgar, whose extraordinary optimism and power to transform
his dreams into reality make him “great” nonetheless.
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- - he novel’s narrator, Nick is a young man from
Minnesota who, after being educated at Yale and fighting in World War I,
goes to New York City to learn the bond business. Honest, tolerant, and
inclined to reserve judgment, Nick often serves as a confidant for those
with troubling secrets. After moving to West Egg, a fictional area of Long
Island that is home to the newly rich, Nick quickly befriends his
next-door neighbor, the mysterious Jay Gatsby. As Daisy Buchanan’s cousin,
he facilitates the rekindling of the romance between her and Gatsby. The
Great Gatsby is told entirely
through Nick’s eyes; his thoughts and perceptions shape and color the
story.
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- - Daisy’s immensely wealthy husband, once a member
of Nick’s social club at Yale. Powerfully built and hailing from a
socially solid old family, Tom is an arrogant, hypocritical bully. His
social attitudes are laced with racism and sexism, and he never even
considers trying to live up to the moral standard he demands from those
around him. He has no moral qualms about his own extramarital affair with
Myrtle, but when he begins to suspect Daisy and Gatsby of having an
affair, he becomes outraged and forces a confrontation.
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- Nick’s cousin, and the woman Gatsby loves. As a
young woman in Louisville before the war, Daisy was courted by a number of
officers, including Gatsby. She fell in love with Gatsby and promised to
wait for him. However, Daisy harbors a deep need to be loved, and when a
wealthy, powerful young man named Tom Buchanan asked her to marry him,
Daisy decided not to wait for Gatsby after all. Now a beautiful socialite,
Daisy lives with Tom across from Gatsby in the fashionable East Egg
district of Long Island. She is sardonic and somewhat cynical, and behaves
superficially to mask her pain at her husband’s constant infidelity.
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- Daisy’s friend, a woman with whom Nick becomes
romantically involved during the course of the novel. A competitive
golfer, Jordan represents one of the “new women” of the 1920s—cynical,
boyish, and self-centered. Jordan is beautiful, but also dishonest: she
cheated in order to win her first golf tournament and continually bends
the truth.
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- Myrtle’s husband, the lifeless, exhausted owner of
a run-down auto shop at the edge of the valley of ashes. George loves and
idealizes Myrtle, and is devastated by her affair with Tom. George is
consumed with grief when Myrtle is killed. George is comparable to Gatsby
in that both are dreamers and both are ruined by their unrequited love for
women who love Tom.
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- Tom’s lover, whose lifeless husband George owns a
run-down garage in the valley of ashes. Myrtle herself possesses a fierce
vitality and desperately looks for a way to improve her situation.
Unfortunately for her, she chooses Tom, who treats her as a mere object of
his desire.
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- A notorious underworld figure, Wolfsheim is a
business associate of Gatsby. He is deeply involved in organized crime,
and even claims credit for fixing the 1919 World Series. His character,
like Fitzgerald's view of the Roaring Twenties as a whole, is a curious
mix of barbarism and refinement (his cuff links are made from human
molars). After Gatsby's murder, however, Wolfsheim is one of the only
people to express his grief or condolences; in contrast, the socially
superior Buchanans fail to attend Gatsby's funeral.
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Dan is a somewhat coarse
man who became immensely wealthy during the Gold Rush. He mentored Gatsby when
he was a young man and gave him a taste of elite society. Though he left Gatsby
a sum of money after his death, it was later seized by his ex-wife.
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- The East Egg is the "fashionable" side
of Long Island where the Buchanans and other "old money" people
live.
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- The West Egg is the "less fashionable"
side of Long Island where Gatsby and Nick live.
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- The Valley of Ashes is the desolate wasteland
where the Wilsons live.
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- New York City is a symbol of what America has
become in the 1920's : a place where anything goes, where money is made
and bootleggers flourish, and where the World Series can be fixed by a man
such as Meyer Wolfsheim.
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- - The East is portrayed as corrupt and filled
with loneliness and isolation.
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- Nick begins to reminisce about his boyhood
growing up in the Midwest. In this chapter, the Midwest is associated with
purity and innocence and youth. The East is portrayed as corrupt and
filled with loneliness and isolation.
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