Money And Class In The Great Gatsby

Words: 556
Pages: 3

Although America is built on the belief that everybody is equal, The Great Gatsby challenges this through its use of class and money. The author F. Scott Fitzgerald shows us that money and class can affect: living environment, marriage, and how well you are treated. We are shown this through The Valley of Ashes, the relationships between characters, and the rules you can break.
As we are reading we are introduced to a place called The Valley of ashes. This is where businesses decided to dump their industrial ashes. The Valley of Ashes is also where people of lower income and class live. The Valley of Ashes also symbolizes how lower classmen can be left behind or forgotten about, and where dreams go to die. On either side of The Valley of Ashes though, are the East Egg or the West Egg. This also shows the gap in equality through how you survive. If you are in an upper class, you really only drive through and maybe stop to get gas. This is where the people who made their dreams came true live.
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They were in love, but since Gatsby had not found his riches Daisy married Tom. Before this though we find out that Tom is having an affair with Myrtle. We find this out when Tom takes Nick into the city and they have to stop in The Valley of Ashes to get gas, Myrtles husband runs the gas station. When they are leaving Tom takes Myrtle with him to his house for a party. Myrtle is only in it for the money, so she can have what she wants. Also, in the book Daisy is talking to Nick and states that he will have trouble trying to find women if he doesn’t have money to buy her