thing but the impulse of his own flesh and the demands of his own ego, completely regardless of any concept of either a moral code or a personal loyalty.
For Tom and Daisy Buchanan, it is nothing worries about any potential crisis around them, for they have no moral responsibility at all. Whenever what happens, they will shield themselves with their upper class social status and retreat into their money or leave other people to clean up the mess they've made.
Jordan Baker, at any rate, is no less a creature of the moral wastelandthan is Daisy or Tom Buchanan. As a "lovely" girl who dresses in "white" and always seem to be "cool" and apathetic, Jordan Baker is an opportunist in her own way. Being a 23-year-old women's golf champion becomes involved with Nick during the course of the summer of 1922. She looks like "incurably dishonest" however, though Nick finds Jordan haughty and careless, he finds himself being attracted by her anyway. On the other sides, Jordan once "loved" Nick, for she had sensed the honesty and moral firmness in Nick's heart, and realized that only when staying with a man like Nike can she be free from the mess and continues to be on her own way. But in the end Jordan gets engaged to another man after not seeing Nick for a short time, leaving Nick angry and letting him realizes the same irresponsible exploitation in Jordan as that he sees in Tom and Daisy. Jordan's action seems to intentionally echo Daisy's leaving Gatsby to marry Tom five years ago.
Part III The Cause of Disillusionment of American Dream
3.1 The Jazz Age and the Roaring Twenties
The spirit of the Roaring Twenties was marked by a general feeling of discontinuity associated with modernity, a break with traditions. Everything seemed to be feasible through modern technology. New technologies, especially automobiles, moving pictures and radio proliferated modernity to a large part of the population. Formal decorative frills were shed in favor of practicality in both daily life and architecture. At the same time, jazz and dancing rose in popularity, in opposition to the mood of the specter of World War I. As such, the period is also often referred to as the Jazz Age. The Jazz Age, was, in the words of Malcolm Cowley, "not so much a historical period as a legend of glitter, of recklessness, and of talent in such profusion that it was sown broadcast like wild oats." It was a legend of "American adolescence before pain set in." Fitzgerald became "the angel of the twenties" and his writings those of a man inside that legendary period.
3.2 Social Environment and People factors
Another reason for the disillusionment of Gatsby's American dream may be people factors. Gatsby's love for Daisy was to the point of obsession, it was really touching, but he chose the wrong object to pay for their own love, Daisy was a secular, hedonistic money worshiper. She could never work hand in hand with Gatsby. And she would not pay a high price for the ideal, and make enormous sacrifices. Her life was of no true love, but cannot be without money. Gatsby's tragedy is that he has not been able to understand Daisy's motives, can not understand that she belonged to the complexity of the world. He only saw the world's surface, bright and elegant, but did not see it hidden in the cold and
本论文由英语论文网提供整理,提供论文代写,英语论文代写,代写论文,代写英语论文,代写留学生论文,代写英文论文,留学生论文代写相关核心关键词搜索。