What Does The House Symbolize In The Great Gatsby

799 Words4 Pages

In The Great Gatsby there are many symbols or themes throughout the book. The Great Gatsby is full of symbols, in this book there is a point Fitzgerald is trying to make. Many people simply do not see what he is trying to say and just assume the book is stupid because of how it ends. Fitzgerald makes the color white a pretty big symbol in the book, he makes the color white mean many different things other than one thing. “The windows were ajar and gleaming white against the fresh cut grass outside that seemed to grow a little way in the house… They were both in white, and their dresses were rippling and fluttering as if they had just been blown back in after a short flight around the house.” (Fitzgerald 8) Fitzgerald was describing Jordan Baker and Daisy Buchanan when he first saw them in Tom and Daisy’s house. It is very ironic that they were both in white because the color of white in this means pure or purity and as you can see throughout the book Jordan and Daisy are not to pure. Purity or pure simply means freedom from immorality. The color white is meant to …show more content…

It’s up to us, who are the dominant race, to watch out or these other races will have control of things.” (Fitzgerald 13) Fitzgerald puts this in the book to show how Tom’s character was. This shows that the color white is also more prominent, more superior than any other race. It shows how things were back then, it also shows how Tom thought of others. Tom didn’t care about others, he cared about his money and himself. Tom said he cared about Daisy, but did he really? If Tom really appreciated Daisy, then he would never have cheated on her with a ton of women. Tom didn’t care if he hurt people, as long as he was okay then everything was fine. Fitzgerald put this symbol and these kind of people in the book to show that money cannot make you happy, it cannot fill you up with the joy you are looking