The Great Gatsby – Themes & Expert Analysis

June 6, 2023

A perennial presence on the AP Lit Reading List, the themes at the heart of F. Scott Fitzgerald鈥檚 The Great Gatsby – greed, love, violence, and the 鈥淎merican Dream鈥 – are as compelling as when the novel was published in 1925. While there鈥檚 no doubt that The Great Gatsby is a classic of American literature, it can be difficult for the casual reader to make sense of the text. In this article, we鈥檒l be looking at Great Gatsby themes, plot, and analysis.

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In this article, we鈥檙e going to talk about some of the major themes in The Great Gatsby. Maybe you鈥檙e here because your teacher has asked you to write a paper on the themes in Gatsby, or maybe you鈥檝e just watched Baz Luhrmann鈥檚 2013 version starring Leonardo DiCaprio and want to know a little more about the book that inspired it. Maybe you just keep hearing how important The Great Gatsby is and you want to know what the big deal is. Whatever your reason, in this article we鈥檒l be talking about the themes in Gatsby. We’ll also be thinking about how those themes are presented in the book. (If you鈥檙e interested in learning more about how literature holds up a mirror to society, check out this list of best colleges to study English.)

What鈥檚 the difference between plot and 鈥渢heme鈥? 

On the one hand – plot. It鈥檚 what actually happens in the book.  

First things first 鈥 we need to make sure that we understand the difference between 鈥減lot鈥 and 鈥渢heme.鈥 The plot is the stuff that actually happens – the who, the what, the where. Most of you know the plot of The Great Gatsby, but it鈥檚 worth a quick review. Set in New York City, Long Island, and Queens, The Great Gatsby takes place in 1922, just four years after the end of WWI. The narrator of Gatsby is Nick Carraway, a 29-year-old veteran who has just come east to make his fortune in bonds. Upon his arrival in New York, Nick ends up renting a house on Long Island next a the mansion owned by Jay Gatsby, a mysterious millionaire.

When Nick and Gatsby finally meet, we find out that Gatsby is in love with Nick鈥檚 cousin, Daisy. Unfortunately for Gatsby, Daisy is married to Tom Buchanan. Tom is a brute of a man and a serial philanderer whose current mistress is Myrtle Wilson. Gatsby eventually confesses his love to Daisy (in front of Tom) 鈥 drama ensues. While driving back to Long Island with Gatsby, Daisy accidentally runs over Myrtle, Tom鈥檚 mistress. In the confusion that follows the accident, Tom lets Myrtle鈥檚 husband George think that it was Gatsby who ran over Myrtle. Distraught, George goes to Gatsby鈥檚 house, shoots him in his pool, and then kills himself. Gatsby鈥檚 funeral is attended only by Nick, Gatsby鈥檚 father, Gatsby鈥檚 servants, and 鈥淥wl-eyes鈥 (a guest that Nick met at one of Gatsby鈥檚 parties). Whew!

The Great Gatsby Themes (Continued)

On the other hand – themes. It鈥檚 why the plot matters.

On the other hand, when we talk about 鈥渢丑别尘别蝉,鈥 we鈥檙e talking about the big issues the text is dealing with. These are often the big-idea words you associate with art or literature – 鈥済ood vs. evil,鈥 鈥渓ove,鈥 鈥渘ature,鈥 or 鈥渄eath.鈥 Thinking about the themes in a book can help us break the text into manageable parts that we can discuss and analyze. So, for example, some of the themes in the novel could be 鈥済reed,鈥 or 鈥渨ealth,鈥 or 鈥渓ove.鈥

Let鈥檚 look at a specific example from The Great Gatsby to see how we can move from plot to theme. When we first meet Jay Gatsby, we know him only as a mysterious millionaire who throws elaborate parties at his mansion on Long Island. However, we find out later in the book that Gatsby has misrepresented his past. His actual name is Jay Gatz and he was born to poor farmers in North Dakota. In other words, Gatsby begins his life poor and ends up a millionaire. [Spoiler alert: Gatsby鈥檚 sole motivation for making money is to try to win back Daisy鈥檚 love.] Considering Gatsby鈥檚 rags-to-riches story, it鈥檚 clear that one of the main themes of The Great Gatsby is class. That is, the material circumstances we鈥檙e born into (and whether we can escape these origins).

Once you鈥檝e identified a theme, you can start to think about other moments in the text that have that theme in common. For example, you might think about how different social classes are presented in the book. Who is rich and who is poor? How did they become rich? How did they become poor? In what ways are they described? How do they interact? What options are available to them? Which privileges? What does Gatsby say about the 鈥淎merican Dream鈥? Now that we know what a 鈥渢heme鈥 is, let鈥檚 look more closely at some of the themes in The Great Gatsby.

鈥淭he American Dream鈥 鈥 What is it and did Gatsby achieve it? 

What is the 鈥淎merican Dream?鈥 

Few terms are tossed around more casually than 鈥渢he American Dream.鈥 First, let鈥檚 make sure we understand what we mean when we use this term. In the book that popularized the term, The Epic of America, James Truslow Adams describes 鈥渢he American Dream鈥 as a society in which 鈥渆ach man and each woman shall be able to attain to the fullest stature of which they are innately capable鈥egardless of the fortuitous circumstances of birth or position.鈥 In other words, Adams imagines a society where people鈥檚 futures aren鈥檛 defined by how much money their family has or what class they are.

Has Gatsby really made it? 

It鈥檚 clear that this theme is present in The Great Gatsby. Jay Gatsby seems like the ultimate success story for the American Dream. He comes from nothing – his parents were poor farmers – and ends up a party-throwing millionaire. On the other hand [spoiler alert], at the end of the book, Jay Gatsby gets shot and killed in his pool by a disgruntled mechanic named George Wilson, so there are clearly some downsides to Gatsby鈥檚 success.

The Great Gatsby Themes (Continued)

Besides Gatsby鈥檚 violent death, there are other things in the book that suggest that it might be criticizing the American Dream. While Jay Gatsby is a millionaire, he is decidedly nouveau riche. In other words, he lacks the generational wealth of such old-money families like Daisy and Tom Buchanan. Gatsby is never accepted as a real member of the upper class precisely because he made his own fortune. The book suggests that even if you make millions of dollars, you can鈥檛 ever escape your origins.

What is also interesting is how James Truslow Adams鈥 definition of the American Dream is actually at odds with the spectacular wealth of the characters in The Great Gatsby. For Adams, the 鈥淎merican Dream鈥 is less about money and more about each individual鈥檚 search for 鈥渢he abiding values of life.鈥 Gatsby鈥檚 accumulation of wealth isn鈥檛 about values or morals (it鈥檚 implied he鈥檚 made his millions illicitly). Rather, Gatsby’s millions are in service to his obsession with Daisy Buchanan. Similarly, the old-money wealth of Tom and Daisy Buchanan is a thin veneer that covers their otherwise shallow, bored lives.

So while one of the themes of The Great Gatsby is the 鈥淎merican Dream,鈥 we shouldn鈥檛 stop there. It鈥檚 more accurate to say that Gatsby criticizes the materialism that has replaced the 鈥淎merican Dream.鈥

Social Class 鈥 Is 鈥渞ags-to-riches鈥 really possible? 

In contrast to the implied mobility of the 鈥淎merican Dream,鈥 the novel suggests that class is permanent and unchangeable. As we discussed above, Gatsy never really makes it into the upper class. No matter how many millions he makes, he will always remain a poor farmer鈥檚 son. Conversely, nothing can change the fortunes of those born into wealth. Regardless of their behavior and choices, they will remain unaffected.

We can see this in Gatsby鈥檚 portrayal of Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Tom and Daisy Buchanan are described as callous, destructive people whose money insulates them from the consequences of their actions. Though Tom鈥檚 mistress is run over by a car driven by Daisy, Tom and Daisy face no consequences. Nick Carraway, the narrator of the novel, describes Tom and Daisy in this way: 鈥淭hey were careless people鈥hey smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made鈥︹ In other words, Tom and Daisy are protected by virtue of their class. However ugly their actions, they will stay rich and careless. (All my quotes are from .)

The Great Gatsby Themes (Continued)

In The Great Gatsby, the poor are similarly stuck. Though Myrtle Wilson has access to some luxuries as Tom Buchanan鈥檚 mistress, she and her husband George can never escape their material conditions in the 鈥淰alley of Ashes.鈥 George wants to move to the West. However, the text suggests that he will forever be tied to the garage he owns. What is particularly interesting in the book is how the different classes interact. As we mentioned above, when Tom Buchanan learns of Myrtle鈥檚 death, he lets her husband George believe that it was Gatsby who ran her down. This accomplishes two main things:

1) it punishes Gatsby for his nouveau riche presumptuousness.

2) sets George on his despairing path to suicide. Ultimately, The Great Gatsby portrays a static class-based hierarchy in the service of the generational wealth. Whatever Tom鈥檚 feelings for his mistress Myrtle Wilson, ultimately, his loyalty is to the (classist) status quo.

Personal Agency 鈥 Does an individual have any power?   

The fact that social class is so rigid in the novel should make the reader wonder if people have any ability to change their circumstances. A useful term that describes someone鈥檚 ability to affect their life and circumstances is 鈥減ersonal agency.鈥 Even though he failed in the end, the book clearly portrays Gatsby as someone who believes in his ability to shape his own life and destiny.

There鈥檚 a particularly poignant moment after Gatsby鈥檚 death that shows how driven he was. Nick is talking to Gatsby鈥檚 father when the latter pulls out a book that belonged to a 16-year-old Jay 鈥淛immy鈥 Gatz. On the last flyleaf of the book is Jay鈥檚 schedule for September 12, 1906 and a list of his 鈥淕eneral Resolves.鈥 With the sad pride of a father morning his son, Mr. Gatz remarks that 鈥淛immy was bound to get ahead. He always had some resolves like this or something.鈥 What is interesting in this moment is the contrast between Gatsby鈥檚 failure [no Daisy, shot in his pool] and his father鈥檚 enduring belief in Jimmy鈥檚 drive and ambition.

The Great Gatsby Themes (Continued)

This isn鈥檛 the only time Gatsby鈥檚 belief in his own personal agency is crushed by reality. As mentioned above, the sole reason Gatsby amasses his fortune is to get Daisy back. To understand why he does this, we have to know the backstory between Daisy and Gatsby. Gatsby met Daisy right before he was sent to Europe to fight. While Gatsby didn鈥檛 exactly lie about his modest origins, he wasn鈥檛 exactly truthful. Unfortunately, by the time Gatsby makes it back from the war, Daisy has married the very wealthy Tom Buchanan. Faced with this situation, Gatsby tries to recreate himself as the wealthy suitor he claimed to be. Indeed, when Gatsby talks to Nick about his time with Daisy, he has a monomaniacal desire to remake the present. He states, 鈥溾業鈥檓 going to fix everything just the way it was before,鈥 he said, nodding determinedly. 鈥楽he鈥檒l see.鈥欌

What鈥檚 the deal with that last scene? 鈥 Nick Carraway and Time in The Great Gatsby

In what is one of the most beautifully written scenes in the novel, Nick Carraway returns to Gatsby鈥檚 now abandoned house after the funeral. There are three parts to this scene. Each builds on the previous until we reach the famous final line – 鈥淪o we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.鈥

First, Nick thinks about what Long Island must have looked like to the first European settlers. He imagines the American continent providing, 鈥渇or the last time in history鈥omething commensurate to his capacity for wonder.鈥 Nick then compares this originary wonder to 鈥淕atsby鈥檚 wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy鈥檚 dock.鈥 What is important to note here is that Gatsby鈥檚 wonder can only ever be an imitation of the original wonder felt by the first European settlers. Indeed, Nick notes that while 鈥淸Gatsby鈥檚] dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it,鈥 in reality, 鈥渋t was already behind him, somewhere鈥here the dark fields of the republic rolled on under the night.鈥

The Great Gatsby Themes (Continued)

It鈥檚 important to notice the temporal and geographical distance between Gatsby and his dream. Remember that Gatsby鈥檚 met and fell in love with Daisy five years previous in Louisville, Kentucky. In other words, Gatsby鈥檚 dream 鈥 his courtship of Daisy 鈥 will forever remain behind him, in the past and in the West. Thus, for Nick, 鈥渢he orgastic future that year by year receded before us鈥 can only ever be the ersatz phantoms of our past desires.

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