F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby" seems to be a mere tragic romance, but in the text Fitzgerald defines and defines social disparities and the importance of wealth. He also shows a woman as a man in a very far space. Great Gatsby allows readers to enter the world of wealth in this particular class, experience joy and tragedy, and allow readers to explain the location of gender in the classroom. "Whenever you want to criticize someone," he (my father) told me, "Do not forget that everyone in this world has no advantage you have" (Gatsby 1 ).
In this article, I look at the "Great Gatsby" in feminist criticism and apply it to various forms of feminism. Great Gatsby is a novel by American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. It was first published in 1925 and began in the summer of 1922 at Long Island and the North Shore of New York City. This novel is a story of social instability after the First World War, and the American society enjoyed a high degree of richness in the 1920s. With the soaring financial system. Meanwhile, smuggling of millionaires from the smugglers and an increase in organized crime were prohibited. Fitzgerald praised his wealth and charm, but he was anxious about discreet materialism and lack of morality.
Fitzgerald investigated useless pursuit of American dreams in the novel "Great Gatsby". The idea of dreams in the United States centers around the assumption that individuals gain social position and wealth through their efforts. Jay Gatsby embodies the idea of America's dream in his novel. His rapid rise to the upper class and extraordinary wealth is the result of his hard work and devotion. But his dream of marrying Daisy was not realized because he lacked the ability to provide security due to illegally occupying thieves. Therefore, the accumulated wealth of Gatsby is meaningless. You can not win Daisy's heart simply by emphasizing superficial items. Although he won something that many people think is an American dream, he is lonely and not appreciated. Other people who have dreamed of America through economic freedom and social status also send us unnecessary surface lives.
In "Great Gatsby", F. Scott Fitzgerald has discussions about American dreams based on his desire and fate?