CHARACTER INSIGHT
SYMBOLS & MOTIFS
RELATIONSHIPS & POWER DYNAMICS
EVENTS & STRUCTURE
QUOTATIONS & ANALYSIS
100

This character claims to be “a little cynical,” yet Nick notes she is dishonest in subtle ways.

Jordan Baker

100

The bleak industrial wasteland between West Egg and Manhattan symbolizes the moral decay hidden beneath wealth.

Valley of Ashes

100

Tom insists that Daisy and Nick accompany him to meet Myrtle, reflecting this aspect of his personality.

His entitlement or need for control

100

Nick’s delayed introduction to Gatsby builds this narrative effect.

mystery or suspense

100

Nick opens the novel with his father’s advice about judgment, establishing this key theme.

moral reflection / the limits of judgment

200

Nick first describes this character’s voice as “full of money,” though he doesn't fully understand the meaning until later.

Daisy Buchanan

200

This recurring symbol is introduced long before its deeper emotional meaning is known, representing Gatsby’s longing.

the green light

200

George Wilson’s quiet desperation contrasts sharply with Tom’s aggression, highlighting this major theme.

the class divide / inequality

200

Nick’s first trip to New York with Tom and Myrtle ends in chaos, serving to expose this major truth about Tom.

his moral corruption or hypocrisy

200

Tom’s obsession with a racist book signals Fitzgerald's critique of this element of 1920s society.

White supremacy / Racism

300

This character’s physical strength and arrogance symbolize the brutality of the upper class.

Tom Buchanan

300

The eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg come to symbolize this abstract idea in Nick’s growing understanding of the world.

the loss of spiritual values / moral oversight / judgment

300

Daisy and Jordan’s close friendship demonstrates the social expectations placed on women of this class.

The upper class / old money society

300

At Gatsby’s party, Owl Eyes is shocked that Gatsby’s books are real, not fake, symbolizing this theme.

authenticity vs. performance

300

Daisy’s comment about hoping her daughter will be “a beautiful little fool” reveals her understanding of this aspect of her world.

women’s limited power or societal restrictions

400

This character’s restraint and self-control sharply contrast with the chaos of his parties.

Jay Gatsby

400

Nick describes Gatsby’s mansion as “factual imitation of some Hôtel de Ville,” implying this quality in Gatsby’s lifestyle.

Artificiality or constructed identity

400

The violent moment when Tom hits Myrtle reveals the intersection of these two themes.

Gender and class power / dominance

400

Nick’s role as both participant and observer in early events emphasizes this narrative structure.

the unreliable narrator / limited subjective perspective

400

Nick describes Gatsby’s smile as having a “quality of eternal reassurance,” hinting at this deeper trait.

Gatsby’s ability to make people feel seen / his romantic idealism

500

Nick suggests this character is neither fully in nor fully out of the world of wealth, making him an outsider among the elites.

Nick Carraway

500

Gatsby’s parties—with their loud music, excess, and anonymity—serve as an early symbol of this specific cultural phenomenon of the 1920s.

the rise of mass culture / superficial hedonism of the Jazz Age

500

Gatsby’s hesitance to approach Daisy directly echoes this internal conflict introduced in the first three chapters.

The tension between illusion and reality

500

Nick’s list of people attending Gatsby’s parties (later in the novel) is foreshadowed in Chapter 3 through this structural technique.

Cataloguing of names / social taxonomy

500

Nick ends Chapter 3 by asserting he is “one of the few honest people” he knows, an example of this literary device.

irony or unreliable narration

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