How Does Daisy Present The American Dream In The Great Gatsby

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In his novel, The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald explores the reality of the American Dream. Throughout the novel, he uses Daisy to represent the American Dream. In chapter eight, after Daisy crashes the car, “she vanish[es] into her rich house… leaving Gatsby nothing” (149). Daisy is depicted as soulless; she is willing to let Gatsby take the fall for her faults. In order to remain the American Dream, Daisy must appear blameless to society; therefore, the common man must always take responsibility for her mistakes. Daisy takes from Gatsby until there is nothing left, eventually disappearing behind her wall of wealth to void tinting the perception of the American Dream. In the social construct, the American dream is meant to be perfect and alluring.