Why Is Thinking Important In The Great Gatsby

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Each individual has their own perception of people and events, along with the unique impact it may have on them. This concept can be accurately portrayed in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald is able to describe each character’s process of thinking in a way that puts a reader in the forefront of that character’s thinking and emotion. Each character has a different way of thinking and decision making process. The usage of literature and celebrated classics, such as The Great Gatsby, are able to expand a reader’s understanding of the complexity of human life.
When looking at a complex way of life, no other compares to Mr. Jay Gatsby. As Fitzgerald is able to convey throughout the book, Gatsby has been in pursuit of Daisy since …show more content…

This level of complexity of human thinking and reasoning may be challenging to experience in a reader’s normal life. The theme of Gatsby feeling as though he was spiritually wed to Daisy comes from is a commonality throughout the book. When looking back on their first kiss, Gatsby is able to recall it exceedingly vivid. “His heart beat faster and faster as Daisy’s white face came up to his own. He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever we his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God” (Fitzgerald 110). The kill Gatsby and Daisy share is filled with passion and an underlying level of commitment to each other. After Gatsby discloses that kiss five years in the past, Nick is left speechless; it was an understanding speechlessness, as though Gatsby’s reasoning, that Nick originally thought of as irrational, became clear. It may seem strange that a single kiss is able to produce that level of emotion, but each person experiences an event in a different way. The character of Jay Gatsby provides a look into the complexity of human thought and …show more content…

He recalls something that was of some importance, perhaps something told from a long lost love. He is able to faintly grasp what it is, but may not be able to explain what it is. In that moment, Nick realizes that Gatsby’s dream of reliving the past with Daisy is not that far out of reach. This feeling of revelation by Nick continues throughout the whole book; Nick is finally able to put his view into words in the fleeting pages of The Great Gatsby: “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgasyic future that year by year recedes before us. I eludes us then, but that’s not matter---to-morrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther…”(Fitzgerald 180). Nick is able to put reason to Gatsby’s action; he explains that every person has that one memory or event they are never able quite get back. Readers are able to make that connection to Gatsby’s dream, creating deeper understanding of why they may feel certain emotions and behave they way they do. Fitzgerald’s use of character development and understanding is used to connect the reader to the behavior of the characters, providing a deeper