The Great Gatsby Group

Question:

stephanierose
stephanierose
Student
High School - 11th Grade

How does Fitzgerald introduce the theme of gesture or superficially in The Great Gatsby?

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Posted by stephanierose on Thursday February 12, 2009 at 11:12 AM and tagged with social conventions, the great gatsby, theme.


Answers:

  1. mshurn
    mshurn Teacher
    College - Freshman

    An excellent example of this occurs in Chapter VI when Tom Buchanan, a man whose name is Sloane, and an unidentified woman drop in at Gatsby's house one Sunday afternoon. All are on horseback. Nick is visiting Gatsby at the time. Gatsby acts as a gracious host, inviting the three to have drinks. The woman is friendly, but Sloane is not. The woman invites Nick and Gatsby to dinner. Sloane stands up to leave. It is obvious to Nick that Sloane does not want them to come; Nick says he can't come. When she then invites Gatsby alone, Sloane whispers in her ear. Gatsby does not pick up on the social signals flying all around him. He accepts and leaves the room to make arrangements to follow them in his car. Tom then says to Nick, "My God, I believe the man's coming . . . . Doesn't he know she doesn't want him?"  Sloane and the woman leave quickly before Gatsby can join them. The dinner invitation to Gatsby was a superficial gesture, as superficial as the woman's earlier statement that they would all come to Gatsby's next party. Gatsby, however, was too naive to understand this kind of behavior in "sophisticated" society.

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    Posted by mshurn on Thursday February 12, 2009 at 4:30 PM