What Does the Green Light Symbolize in the Great Gatsby?
December 8, 2023
Much ink has been spilled (perhaps too much) trying to explain what the green light symbolizes in F. Scott Fitzgerald鈥檚 The Great Gatsby. For those of you who read the book in high school (and those of you who pretended to), you likely remember at least one lengthy class discussion dedicated to the significance of the green light at the end of Daisy Buchanan鈥檚 dock. You might have heard people argue that the green light symbolizes 鈥渢he American Dream,鈥 or Gatsby鈥檚 love for Daisy, or maybe Gatsby鈥檚 love of money (money is green, get it?). None of these arguments is wrong, per se. But none of them approach the text with any level of analytical sophistication. In this article, we鈥檙e going to talk about how we can discuss the symbolism of the green light in Gatsby without resorting to simplistic, reductive readings.
If it鈥檚 been a while since you鈥檝e read The Great Gatsby, let鈥檚 review the plot of the book. On the first page of Gatsby, we meet our narrator, Nick Carraway. A recently returned WWI veteran, Nick has gone East to learn the bond business. Once there, he reconnects with his distant cousin, Daisy Buchanan, meets her violent, philandering husband, Tom, as well as Tom鈥檚 mistress, Myrtle. The house Nick is renting in Long Island turns out to be next to the mansion of Jay Gatsby, another WWI veteran who has made millions through some very shady deals. Coincidentally, Gatsby had met (and fallen in love with) Daisy before he left for the war.
What does the green light symbolize in The Great Gatsby? (Continued)
When Gatsby finds out that Daisy is Nick鈥檚 cousin, he asks him to arrange a meet-cute so that he can rekindle his relationship with her. By the end of the book, Daisy ends up accidentally killing Myrtle. Gatsby takes the blame and gets shot by Myrtle鈥檚 jealous husband. Tom and Daisy emerge unscathed and Nick goes back to the Midwest. Through all these events, the green light at the end of Daisy鈥檚 dock reappears as a suggestive metaphor for desire, love, and the inability to recapture the past.
What鈥檚 a 鈥淪ymbol鈥 and Why Do Your Teachers Love Them?
Most basically, a symbol is something 鈥 an object, a word, or picture 鈥 that stands for something else. You can probably name a bunch of symbols off the top of your head. The cross is a symbol for Christianity, a heart is a symbol of love, a dove for peace, etc. In all of these examples, the symbol distills a complex set of meanings into an easily readable sign. This is the strength of a symbol 鈥 it turns something complicated into something simple. In other words, symbols simplify. So far, so good. Things go wrong when we try to read simple symbols into complex works of literature. Like, for example, the green light in Gatsby.
What does the green light symbolize in The Great Gatsby? (Continued)
In his article 鈥,鈥 Rob Goodman tries to explain why literature teachers are so hung up on symbols. Goodman argues that complex literary texts are uniquely ill-suited to assessment culture. In other words, literary texts (which, if successful, 鈥渢hwart right answers鈥), confound an educational system that requires simple ways to judge student performance. Because symbols provide a testable correspondence between 鈥渙bject and meaning,鈥 they are particularly well-suited to assessment. Goodman writes,
鈥淸Symbols] allow for a set of answers to be written on whiteboards, penciled in on flashcards, repeated on tests. They allow students to be marked right or wrong. That鈥檚 why Cliff鈥檚 Notes and Spark Notes regularly come with handy indexed guides to symbols and their meanings鈥攂ecause those meanings are such a predictable feature of English tests.鈥
I know many of you are probably here because you鈥檙e looking for a symbolic reading of the green light in Gatsby. We鈥檒l get there! At the same time, I鈥檓 going to try to add just a bit more analytic complexity to our discussion 馃檪
When is a light just a light?
Goodman鈥檚 article is primarily about symbols and the American education system. However, he does make a brief mention of a text by Erich Auerbach that might help us understand how the green light functions in Gatsby. Goodman cites Auerbach鈥檚 to explain why symbols feel important. Goodman cites Auerbach鈥檚 belief that realism (of which Gatsby is a prime example) must be considered in relation to the 鈥渇igural worldview鈥 in which 鈥渆vents or objects can be assigned significance as signs, or 鈥榝igures鈥 of a divine plan.鈥 While Goodman uses this citation to sum up artists鈥 ability to imbue metaphysical significance to the banal 鈥 I take a different view. I鈥檓 inclined to understand our desire for symbols as simply a desire for some sort of significance in the face of a world bereft of meaning.
You鈥檙e probably wondering how this connects to The Great Gatsby. Let鈥檚 look at the final paragraph of the text to try and understand what鈥檚 happening. In perhaps the most affecting lines in American literature, our narrator Nick Carraway writes that,
鈥淕atsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that鈥檚 no matter鈥攖omorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms further鈥 And one fine morning鈥擲o we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.鈥
What does the green light symbolize in The Great Gatsby? (Continued)
There鈥檚 no doubt that the green light is a symbol. Gatsby can鈥檛 believe in a literal light. Rather, Gatsby can only believe in what the light symbolizes鈥攖he 鈥渙rgastic future that year by year recedes before us.鈥 Or does he? In this moment in the text, it鈥檚 important to remember who鈥檚 talking鈥攐ur narrator, Nick Carraway. Rather than establishing the green light as some sort of definitive symbol, what if we say that this moment merely tells us something about Nick鈥檚 own desire for meaning?
Nick Carraway鈥揜eliable Reporter?
We need to remember that the story of Gatsby has always already been filtered through the lens of our narrator, Nick Carraway. When Nick writes the first line of the novel: 鈥淚n my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice鈥︹ all the events of the story have already happened. Thus, when Nick says 鈥淣o鈥擥atsby turned out all right at the end,鈥 Gatsby is already dead. This retrospective rewriting of the past cannot be overstated. When Nick waxes eloquently about 鈥渢he abortive sorrows and short-winded elations of men,鈥 in the first section of the text, he has already attended Gatsby鈥檚 parties, met Daisy, Tom, and Jordan, watched Daisy fall in and out of love with Gatsby, and attended Gatsby鈥檚 funeral.
This is all to say that the entire text of The Great Gatsby is Nick looking back on a particularly fraught period of his life. As with any memory, there are bound to be elisions, gaps, and erasures. I certainly don鈥檛 mean to say that Nick is purposefully lying to the reader. At the same time, given the violence, grief, and upheaval of his time with Gatsby, he could be forgiven for letting his emotions and desires cloud his reporting.
Dreams of the Past / Dreams in the Present
With this new perspective, let鈥檚 take another look at the last mention of the green light in the novel. Earlier we read Nick鈥檚 assertion that 鈥淕atsby believed in the green light鈥︹, but it鈥檚 important to examine this 鈥済reen light鈥 in relation to the entirety of Nick鈥檚 final musings. In the final paragraphs of the novel, Nick establishes a direct analogy between Gatsby鈥檚 light and 鈥渢he old island here that flowered once for Dutch sailors鈥 eyes鈥攁 fresh, green breast of the new world鈥 (emphasis added). Only after this meditation on the 鈥渄iscovery鈥 of the American continent does Nick consider Gatsby. He writes,
鈥淎nd as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown world, I thought of Gatsby鈥檚 wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy鈥檚 dock. He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know that it was already behind him, somewhere back in that vast obscurity beyond the city, where the dark fields of the republic rolled on under the night.鈥
What does the green light symbolize in The Great Gatsby? (Continued)
In this first part of this quote, Nick establishes a contrast between Gatsby鈥檚 dream and reality. On the one hand 鈥淸Gatsby鈥檚] dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it鈥濃攐n the other, 鈥渋t was already behind him.鈥 Let鈥檚 try to figure out what Nick means here. It鈥檚 safe to say that Gatsby鈥檚 dream has always been Daisy. If this is the case, what does Nick mean when he says that Gatsby鈥檚 dream of Daisy 鈥渨as already behind him鈥? To understand this statement, we have to remember that Gatsby met and fell in love with Daisy five years before at Camp Taylor in Louisville, Kentucky. With this in mind, what Nick means becomes clear. Gatsby thinks that his dream is within reach. He doesn鈥檛 realize that he鈥檚 still chasing a dream from five years ago.
Nick Carraway and the Tyranny of Hope
According to Nick, Gatsby is split between the present and the past. This same divide plays itself out in the final lines of the novel. Recall Nick鈥檚 statement:
鈥淕atsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that鈥檚 no matter鈥攖omorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms further鈥 And one fine morning鈥擲o we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.鈥
On the one hand, we (along with Gatsby) believe in 鈥渁n orgastic future.鈥 On the other, we are 鈥渂orn back鈥nto the past.鈥 We know that Gatsby was chasing a future with Daisy that was based on a past that cannot be recreated. Understood in this way, the quote above does two things. 1) it generalizes this condition to all humanity. 2) asserts its absolute inevitability. Reading the quote above, Nick implicates himself (and perhaps everyone) in this temporal split鈥斺渋t eludes 耻蝉鈥别 will run鈥tretch our arms.鈥 According to Nick, we continue in this impossible striving due to some perverse optimism. After all, if we run fast enough and stretch out far enough, 鈥渙ne fine morning鈥斺
At the same time, Nick seems to imply that this condition is inevitable. According to Nick, this imaginary future is always already our past coming back to haunt us. In other words, what we imagine for our future is merely the already dead dream of our past.
What鈥檚 Left for Nick?
Like I said at the beginning of this essay, it鈥檚 not wrong to say that the green light symbolizes Gatsby鈥檚 love of Daisy. At the same time, to claim that 鈥済reen light = Daisy鈥檚 love鈥 doesn鈥檛 give us much insight into how the green light functions in the text. Remember, everytime we read about the green light, it鈥檚 because Nick wants to talk about the green light. It鈥檚 safe to say that it鈥檚 not actually Gatsby who鈥檚 obsessed with the green light鈥攊t鈥檚 Nick.
When I read the final lines of the book, I鈥檓 struck by a feeling of resignation. For Nick, it鈥檚 as if we鈥檙e stuck replaying the past, even when we try to dream our futures. In some ways, it makes sense that Nick might come to such a conclusion. We mustn鈥檛 forget that Nick has been scarred by the violence of the world. Coming home from the incalculable death of WWI, he finds himself surrounded by the impersonal violence of capitalism run amok. One can understand how, for Nick, the idea of meaningful progress seems unlikely. More likely is an unending cycle of state violence and economic callousness. Considering the events that came after Gatsby鈥檚 publication鈥攖he worldwide economic depression and subsequent world war, Nick鈥檚 pessimism seems prescient.
What does the green light symbolize in The Great Gatsby? 鈥 Additional Resources
For more The Great Gatsby-related resources check out these blogs written by our same expert: