Morality of Jay Gatsby
Unravelling the realities of the Jazz age, the American author F. Scott Fitzgerald unveils the limitless measures taken by Jay Gatsby to rekindle the dormant love between him and the archetype 1920’s golden girl Daisy Buchanan. The romantic tragedy, The Great Gatsby, delves into the lavish customs of the Roaring Twenties, while strategically exposing the lack of sound ethics and moral development. Lawrence Kohlberg’s theory on Moral Development compartmentalizes Jay Gatsby, a bombastic personality, as the least ethical persona of this specific 1920’s setting which centers around East Egg, West Egg and the Valley of Ashes. Living the 1920’s American grandiloquent lifestyle of the wealthy, Jay Gatsby’s motives, behind life decisions, consist largely of an adamant determination to gain peer appreciation, to gain the utmost reward for devoting his life to her, and to gain her love by sacrificing his reputation for hers
Playing a crucial role in Gatsby’s rationale, Daisy Buchanan’s approval magnetizes Gatsby to…