Monday, September 16, 2019
Color and Gatsby Essay
Convey The Jazz Age: overwhelming parties, dresses and a variety of colours to symbolise the vibrant and colourful (maybe garish? ) lives/culture of people during The Jazz Age. Yellow and Gold: Money, Money, Money. Oh, and Death. First off, weââ¬â¢ve got yellows and golds, which weââ¬â¢re thinking has something to do withâ⬠¦gold (in the cash money sense). Why gold and not green? Because weââ¬â¢re talking about the real stuff, the authentic, traditional, ââ¬Å"old moneyâ⬠ââ¬â not these new-fangled dollar bills. So you have Gatsbyââ¬â¢s party, where the turkeys are ââ¬Å"bewitched to dark gold,â⬠and Jordanââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"slender golden arm[s]â⬠(3. 19), and Daisy the ââ¬Å"golden girlâ⬠(7. 99), and Gatsby wearing a gold tie to see Daisy at Nickââ¬â¢s house. But yellow is different. Yellow is fake gold; itââ¬â¢s veneer and show rather than substance. We see that with the ââ¬Å"yellow cocktail musicâ⬠at Gatsbyââ¬â¢s party (1) and the ââ¬Å"two girls in twin yellow dressesâ⬠who arenââ¬â¢t as alluring as the golden Jordan (3. 15). Also yellow? Gatsbyââ¬â¢s car, symbol of his desireââ¬âand failureââ¬âto enter New Yorkââ¬â¢s high society. And if that werenââ¬â¢t enough, T. J. Eckleburgââ¬â¢s glasses, looking over the wasteland of America, are yellow. White: Innocence and Femininity. Maybe. While weââ¬â¢re looking at cars, notice that Daisyââ¬â¢s car (back before she was married) was white. So are her clothes, the rooms of her house, and about half the adjectives used to describe her (her ââ¬Å"white neck,â⬠ââ¬Å"white girlhood,â⬠the kingââ¬â¢s daughter ââ¬Å"high in a white palaceâ⬠). Everyone likes to say that white in The Great Gatsby means innocence, probably because (1) thatââ¬â¢s easy to say and (2) everyone else is saying it. But come on ââ¬â Daisy is hardly the picture of girlish innocence. At the end of the novel, sheââ¬â¢s described as selfish, careless, and destructive. Does this make the point that even the purest characters in Gatsby have been corrupted? Did Daisy start off all innocent and fall along the way, or was there no such purity to begin with? Or, in some way, does Daisyââ¬â¢s decision to remain with Tom allow her to keep her innocence? Weââ¬â¢ll keep thinking about that one. Blue: This Oneââ¬â¢s Up For Grabs Then thereââ¬â¢s the color blue, which we think represents Gatsbyââ¬â¢s illusions ââ¬â his deeply romantic dreams of unreality. We did notice that the color blue is present around Gatsby more than any other character. His gardens are blue, his chauffeur wears blue, the water separating him from Daisy is his ââ¬Å"blue lawnâ⬠(9. 150), mingled with the ââ¬Å"blue smoke of brittle leavesâ⬠in his yard. His transformation into Jay Gatsby is sparked by Cody, who buys him, among other things, a ââ¬Å"blue coatâ⬠ââ¬âand he sends a woman who comes to his house a ââ¬Å"gas blueâ⬠dress (3. 25). Before you tie this up under one simple label, keep in mind that the eyes of T. J. Eckleburg are also blue, and so is Tomââ¬â¢s car. If blue represents illusions and alternatives to reality, maybe that makes the eyes of God into a non-existent dream. As for Tomââ¬â¢s carâ⬠¦well, you can field that one. Grey and a General Lack of Color: Lifelessness (no surprise there) If the ash heaps are associated with lifelessness and barrenness, and grey is associated with the ash heaps, anyone described as grey is going to be connected to barren lifelessness. Our main contender is Wilson: ââ¬Å"When anyone spoke to him he invariably laughed in an agreeable colorless wayâ⬠(2. 17). Wilsonââ¬â¢s face is ââ¬Å"ashen,â⬠and a ââ¬Å"white ashen dustâ⬠covers his suit (2. 17), and his eyes are described as ââ¬Å"paleâ⬠and ââ¬Å"glazed. â⬠Weââ¬â¢re not too surprised when she shows up with a gun at the end of the novel. Green: Life, Vitality, The Future, Exploration Last one. Weââ¬â¢re thinking green = plants and trees and stuff, so it must represent life and springtime and other happy events. Right? Well, the most noticeable image is that green light we seem to see over and over. You know, the green light of the ââ¬Å"orgastic futureâ⬠that we stretch our hands towards, etc. à (9. 149). Right before these famous last lines, Nick also describes the ââ¬Å"fresh, green breast of the new world,â⬠the new world being this land as Nick imagines it existed hundreds of years before. Green also shows upââ¬âwe think significantlyââ¬âas the ââ¬Å"long green ticketsâ⬠that the rich kids of Chicago use as entry to their fabulous parties, the kind of parties where Daisy and Tom meet, and where Gatsby falls in love. So green does represent a kind of hope, but not always a good one. When Nick imagines Gatsbyââ¬â¢s future without Daisy, he sees ââ¬Å"a new world, material without being real, where poor ghosts, breathing dreams like air, drifted fortuitously aboutâ⬠¦ like that ashen fantastic figure gliding toward him through the amorphous trees. â⬠Nick struggles to define what the future really means, especially as he faces the new decade before him (the dreaded thirties). Is he driving on toward grey, ashen death through the twilight, or reaching out for a bright, fresh green future across the water?
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