F Scott Fitzgeralds Commentaries on Materialism
The Great Gatsby is one of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s famous works. In this book, Fitzgerald expresses his commentaries on materialism. During the Roaring 20’s there was an increasing emphasis on materialism. ... In fact his pursuit of “true” love is done through materialism. ... America produced an idealism so impalpable that it had lost touch with reality and a materialism so heavy that it became inhuman.# F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote the perfect novel about the American Dream. ... Through different characters Fitzgerald, proves that hunger for materialism or wealth leads to self-destruction. ... # After Fitzgeralds first novel was published, he became a celebrity and fell into a wild, reckless lifestyle of parties and corruption while desperately trying to please Zelda. ... Through different characters Fitzgerald, proves that hunger for materialism or wealth leads to self-destruction. ... # Gatsby is obsessed with a life of materialism. ... Perhaps some of the most important scenes in The Great Gatsby that F. Scott Fitzgerald uses to express his thoughts on materialism are the parties that Jay Gatsby throws. ... "In his blue garden people came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne” (Fitzgerald, Scott F. ... The library is Fitzgerald’s “hint” to the readers that maybe Gatsby does not care all that much about materialism. ... The fact that Gatsby flaunts all these material positions only as a means to win over his true love, illustrates the fact that this modern society is totally consumed by materialism. ... He only does that as a means to obtain his goal, Daisy, who truly does live by the accords of new American materialism. ... As the novel continued to develop Gatsbys character, F. Scott Fitzgerald allows his readers to see the harsh realities of Daisys life as Tom, her husband, shadows it. ... Fitzgerald chose to show the result of a life based on materialism using Gatsby’s death. Fitzgerald was trying to express to his readers that despite everything, materialism does not lead to eternal happiness. Fitzgerald’s symbolism expresses clearly that a life based on materialism alone is corruption and not a fulfillment of the American Dream. ... Throughout The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald’s main character, Jay Gatsby, is viewed as a man of wealth and perceived success. ... In the novel, Fitzgerald successfully portrays materialism as the corrupt source of the society.