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Characters in The Great Gatsby: Using Location to Elevate Social Status, Study notes of Business

This essay explores the role of location in The Great Gatsby and how characters like Jay Gatsby, Nick Carraway, Tom and Daisy Buchanan use it to elevate their social status and become members of the leisure class. The essay delves into the concept of The American Dream and how the desire to improve one's social standing inspires characters to move from the Midwest to the East. It also discusses how characters use their homes on West Egg and East Egg, as well as their connections to Europe, to establish their social status and secure their position in New York City's leisure class.

Typology: Study notes

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Download Characters in The Great Gatsby: Using Location to Elevate Social Status and more Study notes Business in PDF only on Docsity! Location and Class A Study of the Significance of Place and Social Standing in Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby Plats och klass En studie om betydelsen av plats och klasstillhörighet i Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby Malin Sjöström Fakulteten för humaniora och samhällsvetenskap English III 15hp Anna Swärdh Magnus Ullén 2015-08-29 Serial number 2 Abstract This essay focuses on location and class in The Great Gatsby. The essay argues that the aspect of location has a defining role in the characters’ effort to become a part of the leisure class. The essay will show that some characters use location to elevate their social status and consequently become members of the leisure class: Jay Gatsby, Nick Carraway, Tom and Daisy Buchanan all use location to elevate their social standing. In addition the essay will show how location works against the characters Myrtle and George in their desire for a better life, and consequently they have to use other methods to try to acquire what they want. Thus, as location is shown to be a method for elevating the characters’ social status it also becomes apparent that this method is only available for those who already have a substantial amount of money. 5 (8). As he is a man from a wealthy family he can afford to rent a place on a fashionable location as the West Egg. Even though the house is a bungalow he does manage to find a place in one of the more exclusive areas in New York City. West Egg is a fashionable place for the wealthy to live and because of that signals social status. Though being described in the novel as less fashionable than the East Egg, West Egg is still a location fitting for a certain kind of people. Thus the East is, to Nick, a place where he can become competent in an occupation fitting his social standing, with a home that reflects his social status. Although the house is small and he cannot show it off to flaunt his wealth in the same way as other characters can, just being able to mention in conversations that he lives on West Egg, neighbor to Gatsby, signal his social standing and wealth. Ultimately this confirms that even for a seemingly moral man wealth and social standing matter, which he displays in him securing a home in the desirable location, the West Egg. Even though Nick might not involve himself in all the parts of the life of the leisure class there is further evidence that he cares about his social standing. He is portrayed as a man that inspires confidence with a seemingly good sense of morality. While Nick can be seen as someone who stands apart from the leisure class it is here he, in terms of wealth, belongs. The fact that he is very aware of the West Egg being less fashionable than East Egg can imply that he does care about how the location is perceived by New York City’s society. Evidence of him remarking the difference between the two locations can be seen when he attends one of Gatsby’s parties for the first time. Here he refers to the people attending representing “the nobility of the countryside” and amongst the crowd of people one could find people from East Egg “condescending to West Egg and carefully on guard against its spectroscopic gaiety” (Fitzgerald 51). While being the less desirable location of the two it is still a location suited for the upper classes and Nick residing there is a clear sign of his awareness of his social standing. To live on West Egg in short supports his claims as a person with a certain social status and consequently a member of the leisure class. The protagonist Jay Gatsby, is the only character who comes from the West that is of a more deprived origin, financially and in terms of class. In Gatsby’s project to become a part of the leisure class one can find several indications that his social status is connected with the aspect of location. One of the first things he does as a young man is to change his name; he rejects his family name Gatz and becomes Gatsby. As Barbara Will points out in her article “The Great Gatsby and the Obscene Word” the name Gatz is “…haunted by ethnic, and specifically Jewish, overtones” (133). Though the name can be carried by people who are and are not Jewish it gives society the opportunity to view him as being inferior for that reason alone. Consequently he wants to detach himself from any name that would bring him “socioeconomic inequalities” due to his religious background as Sean McCloud and William Mirola mention in their book Religion and Class in America: Culture, History and Politics (29). Thus Gatsby leaves the family name behind as a first step to become someone 6 else. Though being from a deprived origin Gatsby does not seem to be especially troubled by this fact, until he meets and falls in love with Daisy. Since Daisy is so far above him in social standing and wealth he feels that he is not enough and gets it affirmed when coming back from the war and finding her married to someone else. It is then he decides to make something out of himself and decides that the place to achieve this is New York, a place filled with opportunities. Nevertheless he is a person that seemingly has always strived to better himself not just to become the Gatsby we know in the novel. In his early life when living with his parents in the West he strived to be a better person, as seen in the schedule he set up for himself where one of the points was to “be better to parents” (Fitzgerald 180). This in some ways shows that Gatsby bears a sense of goodness, a sense which he manages to keep throughout the novel despite him being associated with people of the unscrupulous kind. Yet this strive to better himself in many ways can be linked to his upbringing in the Midwest. He is a man that comes, as previously mentioned, from a more disadvantaged origin, a fact that made him want to achieve something with his life. One can be lead to believe that the prospect of a life in the Midwest initially is his main motivator in order to get ahead; he realized that the life of many like him, being poor, was not something he wanted. He sees the people surrounding him and finds it to be unsatisfactory, describing his parents as “shiftless and unsuccessful farm people” (105). In his mind they are completely unsatisfactory to the extent that in his imagination they are not really his parents at all. Furthermore after being shown the good life by Dan Cody - a millionaire whom Gatsby saved - and the loss of it when Cody dies amplifies the feeling of his surrounding being unsatisfactory (106). Consequently it is a contributing factor to the departure for the East later on. The Midwest is not a part of the country where opportunities are ample for a man like Gatsby. He finds that in order to gain wealth, power and rise in class he must leave. Even though the East is where Gatsby will make his dreams come true he must find the means to achieve them. He finds that the most promising and easy approach is to plunge himself into the world of bootlegging, selling alcohol illegally. Gatsby’s 1920’s America was a time also known as the Jazz age which meant night life and a desire for alcohol. As Mitchell Newton-Matza points out in his book Jazz Age: People and Perspectives the alcohol that people wanted was illegal due to the 1920’s being “the era of prohibition” (37). However this did not hinder people from purchasing it nonetheless. That is most likely one of the reasons for Gatsby finding the business so lucrative. After gaining a substantial fortune Gatsby buys a grand mansion on West Egg and is now spending his time throwing numerous, endless parties where ostensibly everyone is invited. I believe that on the first night I went to Gatsby’s house I was the one of the few guests who had actually been invited. People were not invited – they went there. Sometimes they 7 came and went without having met Gatsby at all, came for the party with a simplicity of heart that was its own ticket of admission. (Fitzgerald 27) Gatsby in my opinion throws these parties in order to show off his prosperity to the members of the leisure class, to let everyone see that he is a man of substantial means. As Susan Currell mentions in American Culture in the 1920’s this was the favorite pastime for people of the 1920’s America, to spend their time at parties with an extensive emphasis on alcohol. Fitzgerald and other writers of the 1920’s led “destructive lifestyles, drinking excessively” (36). As the famous writers of the roaring twenties had alcoholic problems during the time of prohibition in America it is understandable that it reflected into their work. After making a substantial amount of money James Gatz transforms into Jay Gatsby. This means creating a new persona, presenting himself as always having been wealthy and that this wealth had not been obtained by his illegal business of bootlegging. There are many rumors going around concerning who he is and how and where he got all his money from. One of the rumors of his wealth is that he would have inherited it from a family member. “Well, they say he’s a nephew or a cousin of Kaiser Wilhelm’s. That’s where all his money comes from” (Fitzgerald 38). Since he obtained his wealth illegally it is important to Gatsby that the origin of his wealth is unknown and preferably he wants people believing the story of him inheriting the money, thus creating the illusion of him being a man of consequence with invented family relations to hide his background and to conceal where his money comes from. However, the endeavor to become a man of consequence is not solely aimed toward Gatsby getting respect from the people of the leisure class as a whole, but especially toward earning the respect and attention from one special person, Daisy. Gatsby is in love with a woman who is married to another man, a man who is extremely wealthy. In Gatsby’s mind the only way to make Daisy leave her husband for him is to become wealthy himself hence his involvement in the bootlegging business (Henry and Walker Bergström 373). After gaining his fortune he even buys a home on Long Island to be close to her. “Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay.” (Fitzgerald 85). He buys it to impress Daisy and to let her know that he is now in possession of a quite substantial wealth, to let her see that he can provide for them. Gatsby’s attempts to get Daisy can be said to make him a romantic, as Hays mentions in ‘Oxymoron in The Great Gatsby’: according to Gatsby one can make it through hard work and perseverance, and by that gain both “social acceptance and respect” by the likes of Tom Buchanan (319). As many of the other characters in the novel Gatsby has neither birth nor money which is what the Easterners find vital in society. Therefore he has to compensate for this by being the best man he can in terms of having money and an air about him that will intrigue people and make them forget his past. Thus one can see Gatsby using location to establish himself as being a man with wealth and social status in order to earn the respect of the woman he loves, Daisy, and to be close to her once more. 10 Eastern leisure class. Tom then uses his capital in different ways in order to get ahead, to be taken as a man of consequence. The most obvious example of Tom and Daisy using location to show their social standing can be seen in their decision to move East and purchase a house on East Egg. Knowing that East Egg is a very fashionable place to live Tom and Daisy use some of their vast fortune to purchase a house there, a house that is described in the novel as being a white palace (11). In other words they are using the aspect of location to truly become a part of the leisure class in New York. Moreover the fact that they can afford to live on East Egg where the people of ‘old money’ can be found aids their attempt of being their equal in society. The house is described by Nick as being a “…Georgian Colonial mansion, overlooking the bay” (12). One can see that the previous statements about Tom taking pride in his possessions also concerns his home on East Egg. As he states “I’ve got a nice place here, he said, his eyes flashing about restlessly. It belonged to Demaine, the oil man” (13-14). Knowing that purchasing a home on East Egg and that it had once been owned by someone prominent Tom is using his money to show off his social standing through the aspect of location. One can also look at the purchase of the house on East Egg as a way to further cover the fact that Tom and Daisy are both originally from the Midwest. As East Egg is seen as extremely fashionable it could be seen as a proclamation of their wealth, power and social status. Furthermore Tom and Daisy are like Gatsby using Europe as a way to establish themselves socially. They spent a year in France doing nothing but spend time where the rich could be rich with each other and play polo (Fitzgerald 12). As Nick describes it Tom and Daisy went there for no apparent reason. However one could claim that it was a way for them to prove their social standing by making it apparent that they could spend a year in Europe without having any concerns about the expenses. Therefore one can see that by having a connection to Europe they can establish themselves as a prominent couple that can be seen as a part of the leisure class. Hence the aspect of location becomes very central in their way towards proclaiming their place in this class. In The Great Gatsby there is a contrast between the prosperous life of the leisure class that we see in the characters such as Gatsby and those less fortunate. The place where one finds these less fortunate people is the Valley of Ashes. The people that inhabit this area of New York are not a part of the social class that has been discussed so far. It is in The Valley of Ashes where we find the characters Myrtle and George. The Valley of Ashes is depicted in quite a grim way as a place that no one would ever want to live, a stark contrast to the glittering mansions of Long Island: This is a valley of ashes – a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens; where ashes take the forms of houses and chimneys and rising smoke and, finally, with a transcendent effort, of ash-grey men, who move dimly and already crumbling through the powdery air. Occasionally a line of grey cars crawls along an invisible track, gives out a ghastly creak, and comes to rest, and immediately the ash- 11 grey men swarm up with leaden spades and stir up an impenetrable cloud, which screens their obscure operations from your sight. (Fitzgerald 29) This is how Nick describes the location the first time The Valley of Ashes is mentioned in the novel as he and Tom are making their way to Tom’s mistress, Myrtle. George and Myrtle are two characters that represent another life, a life that is completely different to the life of the leisure class. The characters previously examined all use the aspect of location to elevate their social status but here one can see how location is something that can be used against Myrtle and George and their desire to improve their situation. Having a home in the Valley of Ashes is not something Myrtle and George can use to obtain a place in the higher social classes. Consequently they have to use other methods to get what they want when location is something that can be held against them in their endeavor to elevate themselves. Through marrying George, Myrtle thought that she could solve her problem of being a part of the lower classes. She believed him to be a different man than the one he turned out to be, she believed he was a man that could elevate her to a higher level of social status. As she quite bitterly points out in the statement “I married him because I thought he was a gentleman, she said finally. I thought he knew something about breeding, but he wasn’t fit to lick my shoe.” (Fitzgerald 41). This quote indicates that Myrtle was in search of a way of rising up to more esteemed circles, even though she did not have the so-called ‘breeding’ for it. But she was mistaken and now they are living in a place which is a symbol of their lack of wealth and class. Anyone of importance would not degrade themselves by living in such a place, which has the implication that it is almost impossible for them to improve their situation. As their home becomes a symbol for their lack of means, the aspect of location defines them as well as Gatsby’s home defines him and his role in society. Since they represent the lower class they function to express what Jerry Carrier defines as the basis of class: “You can only have a king if you have many peasants. You can only have the super-rich if you have many who are poor. And these fundamentals are the basis of class.” (Carrier 235). The fact that the aspect of location will never be something that they can use for their advantage means that Myrtle and George have to find another way of elevating themselves in class. In a novel where location is very central in securing one’s place in the higher classes one can now see an example of where location works against two characters. George does what he can to make his business as much of a success it can be, although the garage is described as a place with “interior was unprosperous and bare; the only car visible was the dust-covered wreck of a Ford which crouched in a dim corner” (Fitzgerald 30). Through this quote one can see that his business is not doing that well and he makes it clear in the way he answers Tom about the business where his reply is described as being unconvincing. “Hello, Wilson, old man, said Tom, slapping him jovially on the shoulder. How’s business? I can’t complain, answered Wilson unconvincingly. When are you going to sell me that car?” (31). This implies that the business is not doing well and that George 12 lacks the resources to make the garage more prosperous and with a nice interior. Seeing that the garage is located in the Valley of Ashes the garage was never going to be a place where the clientele of the higher classes would visit. Yet he does not do much to make a change. As Tyson points out in Critical Theory Today: A User-Friendly Guide the development of their story makes us sympathize with George but it is weakened by his failings as a person. Thus instead of getting angry at the class oppression, the system, we get irritated by George’s lack of character, his inability to make something out of himself in this capitalist America: “…we blame the victim instead of the system that victimizes him.” (Tyson 76). Nevertheless George is defined by the location and furthermore it prevents him to make the business more of a success since the location limits him to a certain kind of people that maybe cannot afford the service. One can find further examples of Myrtle attempting to rise in social status despite the fact that location works against her. For instance Myrtle in a way sells her body as a means to lure Tom into marrying her and hence elevate herself to a higher level in society. By having an affair with him she can have material things, gifts, from Tom, which her husband cannot afford to give her. In addition to that it would seem that Myrtle also receives some kind of respect or esteem by being the wealthy and powerful mistress of Tom Buchanan. Tom Buchanan’s social power has an effect on Myrtle’s acquaintances as they praise her person and her choice of clothing, although she would be looked down upon by women from the same strata as Daisy (Fitzgerald 37). This shows that she using Tom’s social standing to get away from her own dreary life with a husband she cannot stand. Yet her sister’s depiction of the relationship between Tom and Myrtle suggests that Myrtle believes that in the future she will become Mrs. Buchanan. You see, cried Catherine triumphantly. She lowered her voice again. It is really the wife that’s keeping them apart. She is a Catholic, and they don’t believe in divorce. Daisy was not a Catholic, and I was a little shocked at the elaborateness of the lie. (Fitzgerald 39-40) Thus one can suspect that Tom has been deceitful and promised Myrtle that he would leave his wife for her, if he only could do so. Furthermore Myrtle is seemingly convinced that he will and they will get married and move West until everything settles down. The fact that she believes the plan is for them to move West indicates that Tom was lying all along. Because of all Tom has done to be seen as a member of the leisure class of the East it seems unlikely for him to move back to the West and leave it all behind. Moreover Tom would be severely looked down upon by society if he would marry a person like Myrtle. This is most likely why Myrtle believes that they would be moving West where they might not be as disdained as they would be in the East. However if one looks back on Tom’s way of being and his previous actions this would prove to be very unlikely. He is a collector he has a need for owning as much as he can in order to prove his worth and power and Myrtle is just an item on the list of his possessions. Mary McAleer Balkun refers to collecting in the novel as being
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