The car of the drunk man is also symbolic, as he runs his car off the road and breaks the wheel. It describes the dominance of commercialism how wealth is the center of attraction for the society. The rich and complex description of Gatsby’s car is an epitome of ostentation and excess. Symbol #9Ĭars in the novel symbolize the display of vanity. The valley of ashes is grey symbolizing hopelessness, or filthy side of the society.
Gatsby, Daisy, and Jordan wear white, but none of them is a morally ideal character. While white color is a symbol of purity, in the novel it symbolizes immorality. Blue color stands for illusions and falsifying dreams Gatsby’s garden is blue, Eckleberg’s eyes are blue, and chauffer’s uniform is also blue. It represents the corrupt and false standards of Gatsby and the society of that time. Symbol #8Ĭolors are widely used in the novel having deeper meanings. The green light thus represents the false status of dream and hope that win nothing for Gatsby. It is the symbol of death too, as Michalis describes the car that kills Myrtle as a green light, though, it is a yellow car. It symbolizes the bulk of wealth which Gatsby earns to win Daisy back in life. In the novel, green stands for Gatsby’s hope and short life. It universally represents vitality, wealth and growth. Just like the Green Light, Green color runs throughout the novel. She lets Gatsby believe that she will leave Tom for him, but later it is found that money is the most important thing for her. Similarly, Daisy appears to be innocent and pure, but her heart is filled with lust, carelessness, and corruption. Universally of white color represents purity, chastity, and innocence whereas yellow stands for corruption. A daisy is a flower with white petals and a yellow center. East symbolizes corruption, whereas West symbolizes goodness. It is the world of those who make their own fortune and are not rich by birth. West Egg stands for newly rich people like Gatsby. It represents the people, who are born rich and are considered classy, with an arrogant stance toward West Egg. Symbol #5Įast and West Eggs are two fictional villages Fitzgerald has created to represent the different ideas of the new rich and the old rich. This is a highly effective symbol that represents the divide between the poor and the rich class in the society of that time and even the present. It also depicts the miserable plight of people like George Wilson who live among the ashes without ambition.
SYMBOLS IN THE GREAT GATSBY ECKELBERG GLASSES CODE
It represents how morality and social code of conduct are dropped out of the industrial society. It is a place between East and West Egg created by dumping the industrial waste. Nick goes there to search for his mistress. The valley of ashes is a symbolic place in the novel that first appears in chapter two.
To Nick, they represent the waste of past which sticks around, though, vanished. To George Wilson, they are the eyes of God that watch over every segment of the society. These eyes also represent the hollowness and solidity in Gatsby’s eyes, for despite having all the glitters in life, his eyes reflect emptiness. It is clear from the fact of how Gatsby earns a lot of wealth to get Daisy back in life.
The eyes represent the commercialism which is the backbone of the American dream. These are faded bespectacled eyes printed on the billboard over the ‘valley of ashes’. Another symbol we see in the novel is the eyes of T.