How Is Daisy Carraway Selfish

Words: 697
Pages: 3

Daisy Buchanan upholds status as a surreal, enchanting character in Gatsby’s and the world's eyes, yet Nick Carraway exposes her for who she is. Daisy proves to be a childish, selfish, and naive character by the end of her appearances. Daisy is cold. Recounting his last encounter with Tom Buchanan, Nick remarks “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy-- they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that had kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made….” I have known people like Tom and Daisy, you meet them everyday. People with no peripheral sense of self, or no sense of other creatures. People who take things for granted because they …show more content…
And I hope she’ll be a fool-- that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool. You see, I think everything’s terrible anyhow. Everyone thinks so-- the most advanced people.’” This quote is engaging and what she says about having a daughter is absolutely true. The world is a terrible, horrific place. It is no place for a woman, and Daisy knows this well enough. Despite that, the only time Daisy's daughter makes an appearance, she is treated like an object by her mother, which says much about Daisy as a person. Daisy both is ignorant about the world the way it is, but understanding of what it is like being a woman. She is under the impression that she is an intellectual just because of the things she has seen and done, and people she has socialized with, all due to her elite position. While she has class and knows interesting things, she knows nothing of love. This makes her character all the more intricate and flawed, as she has no real understanding of how the world works when you aren’t wrapped in privilege. It is true to an extent that in life, your own being is the only thing guaranteed to stay with