WELCOME STUDENTS!
This is a place for us to discuss openly and honestly the literature we are reading. Here we are all just communicating our thoughts on what we are reading. There are no right and wrong answers. However, you are expected to be polite, mature, and on topic.
2 comments:
Gatsby explains the kiss to make Nick understand the commitment that he has towards Daisy and Gatsby's own devotion to repeating the past. For example, right before Gatsby's kiss to Daisy, he "cried incredulously" that "of course you can" repeat the past. This is the point of Gatsby's interlude to the past. To show Nick that the past is good and that deep down, Gatsby knows he can reach it again. The significance of the kiss between Gatsby and Daisy is mentioned at the end of the chapter. Nick says that "he knew that when he kissed this girl" that he would be "forever wed" to her. This signifies Gatsby's obsession with Daisy and winning her back by proving he is the best for her (with his money and beautiful house and the parties). The kiss wipes out all things important to Gatsby and just leaves Daisy--his "wife" and throughout his future, he is gearing up for the opportunity to prove that he is ready for her to return to him so they can repeat the past, together.
Gatsby tells Nick about the kiss with Daisy to fully convey how in love with each other they are. He is trying to prove that they will be together and it is just a matter of time before he is able to undo time taken away. He is convinced that the two lovers can repeat the past and fix everything that they had lost. When he kisses Daisy, Gatsby reveals that his once thorough American dream to make bountiful money is now a thing of the past. After he kisses Daisy, Gatsby fixates his life around her. Everything Gatsby worked for he is ready to through away at the whim of this whimsical woman. Fitzgerald writes that the incarnation was complete, signifying that the mission of James Gatz was complete, and now, Jay Gatsby had a new light at the end of his tunnel. Her name was Daisy.
Post a Comment