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  1. The Great Gatsby Love and Marriage Quotes. The Great Gatsby. Love and Marriage Quotes. ‘I married him because I thought he was a gentleman,’ she said finally. ‘I thought he knew something about breeding, but he wasn’t fit to lick my shoe.’. Myrtle Wilson is talking about her husband, George, during a party in Myrtle’s apartment in ...

  2. Marriage is presented as a transaction in The Great Gatsby, rather than a bond of love. Daisy’s decision to marry Tom for his wealth, rather than waiting for Gatsby, exemplifies this. There is a prevalent theme of infidelity in marriages throughout the novel, suggesting a lack of respect for the institution.

  3. The only marriages we see are marked by adultery, deception, and dissatisfaction. Gatsby thinks that his life (and Daisy's) would have been better if she'd chosen him instead of Tom, but we're not so sure. Fitzgerald seems to take a dim view of marriage in general. Based on his relationship with Zelda, we can understand that.

  4. Gatsby's portrayal of love and desire is complex. So we will explore and analyze each of Gatsby's five major relationships: Daisy/Tom, George/Myrtle, Gatsby/Daisy, Tom/Myrtle, and Jordan/Nick. We will also note how each relationship develops through the story, the power dynamics involved, and what each particular relationship seems to say about ...

    • How is marriage presented in the Great Gatsby?1
    • How is marriage presented in the Great Gatsby?2
    • How is marriage presented in the Great Gatsby?3
    • How is marriage presented in the Great Gatsby?4
    • How is marriage presented in the Great Gatsby?5
  5. This is a traditional, flawed reading of The Great Gatsby, a novel characterised by the importance of idealism vs. reality, the American Dream and the loss of moral values. The theme of class and wealth plays a key role in Gatsby’s ability to win Daisy, and it is the difference in their social status which means the relationship fails.

  6. Gatsby’s failure to attain the American Dream suggests the Dream is both an unattainable and unwise goal. Love and Marriage. The ideals of love and marriage are profoundly strained in The Great Gatsby, a book that centers on two loveless marriages: the union between Tom and Daisy Buchanan and between George and Myrtle Wilson. In both cases ...

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  8. Love and marriage. Nick visits Daisy Buchanan, a distant relative, and her very rich husband, Tom, whom he had known at university. At their house in East Egg village he meets a young woman named Jordan Baker, who was Daisy’s bridesmaid and is now a well-known golfer. Nick and Jordan develop a friendship, which at times has romantic overtones.

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