Tuesday, October 1, 2019
Explore how the language used in this passage describes Gatsbys defeat :: English Literature
Explore how the language used in this passage describes Gatsby's defeat   and its symbolic significance.    Chapter 7: " I glanced at Daisy, who was staringà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦So we drove to the  death through the cooling twilight"    Explore how the language used in this passage describes Gatsby's  defeat and its symbolic significance.    Chapter seven brings the conflict between Tom and Gatsby into the  open, and their conflict over Daisy brings to the surface troubling  aspects of both characters. It opens as the group is gathered in Tom  and Daisy's house. It becomes a vital moment as the group finally  meets Daisy and Tom's baby. It brings out an interesting consequence  to the relationship of Gatsby and Daisy.    When Gatsby first sees the baby Nick says:    "I don't think he had ever really believed in its existence before"    Gatsby and Daisy have been so wrapped up in their own relationship and  their own contentment that they have never taken the child into  consideration before. We see Daisy being so possessive of her  daughter. She eagerly tells the group that:    "She doesn't look like her father. She looks like me. She's got my  hair and shape of the face."    This is suggesting that she is trying to make the child totally hers  and attempts to keep Tom's involvement with the child to the least. In  her life, Daisy owns very little authority. She has no job or means of  independence, which makes her very dependant on Tom. The child is  possibly something she feels she owns and could confidently claims and  tells the group it is hers. However the child seems to be attached to  her father, as when Daisy asks her of her opinion of her mother's  guests the child replies: "Where is daddy"    This is the first implication of Gatsby's defeat. He could make Daisy  forget Tom but the child will always be a bond between Daisy and Tom.  There was a sense of tension as the child left the room, which was  possibly represented by the heat. The weather's heat made Daisy and  the rest struggle through their speeches as so did the tension to  Gatsby as he is starting to uncover the reality and certainty that his  relationship with Daisy is not as smooth as he thought it was.    Tom and Gatsby's first opposition was on which car they should drive  into town. Gatsby did not want Tom to drive his car, whilst Tom  insisted on taking his car. Tom won this little quarrel, which was  possibly a representation of the main fight over Daisy.    The "Circus wagon" could possibly be a representation of Daisy. The  car belonging to Gatsby, but now Tom has taken it by force.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.