Fitzgerald’s Gatsby, the main character is a rich man who longs to be with a girl named daisy. His conquest for her undivided affection eventually led to his death following the discovery of their extramarital affair. In Hemingway’s short story, “The Short Happy Life of Francis Macomber”, Francis Macomber is a cowardly man who wants to keep his wife but is having her drift away from him and into an affair with a more masculine, confident hunter. Once Macomber becomes brave, just like once Gatsby becomes
The Great Gatsby is a novel that shows many views of the Modernist era, In fact it is, more specifically an example of making things new. Near the middle of the novel on page 98, we learn of the true history of James Gatz, a North Dakota native with a big dream and, unfortunately, little money. Until one day a man by the name of Dan Cody came into his life as an oyster picker. James transforms over the next five years to a man by the name of Jay Gatsby, a picture of the rich (Fitzgerald 100). This
Throughout out the novels, The Great Gatsby and Death of a Salesman, characters display the theme of the American Dream. Jay Gatsby and Willy Loman both share similarities along with differences in their view of the American Dream. The American Dream not only influences these characters beliefs, but also their motives, choices, and behavior. Both characters in the novel were both motivated by the ones that around them that influenced their idea of the American Dream. Gatsby can be described as a successful
and the relations between them have long remained a subject of interest to historians, philosophers, and writers alike. As Karl Marx wrote in his Communist Manifesto, “the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles” (4). A critical aspect of the relationship between such classes is the way the socioeconomic elite conduct themselves and how their actions are viewed by the rest of society. William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet and The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald