So We Beat On Boats Against The Current?

The 1920s, also known as the “Jazz Age” or the “Roaring Twenties,” was a period of great economic prosperity, political and social change in America. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald explores and analyzes the escalating American peerage and socioeconomic classes of the era through the separation of old and new money. He also attempts to depict his view of the past, present, and future through the characters and plot development. The novel confronts the question of whether the American Dream is achievable. At the end of the story, Fitzgerald uses Gatsby’s failed attempt to win back Daisy as a symbol of his “worthless struggles” against the current of the American Dream, represented by the distant, continuous flashing of the green light at Daisy’s end. This ultimately conveys the theme that some things cannot be repeated, no matter how hard one tries. Gatsby may have achieved wealth and fame, but he was unable to win Daisy back, as she would never have given up her social position for a man who could never fit into her world. Thus, Gatsby did not achieve the American Dream.

 

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