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Tom Buchanan Unveils The Upper Class In The Great Gatsby

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Lower social classes admire the upper class and their ability to possess the materialistic items they yearn for. A myriad number of people aspire to resemble the upper class, often times unaware of the selfish characteristics that they obtain. On the surface, Tom Buchanan for instance, appeared to be one thatof thethat people society strived to be. He was an extremely wealthy individual who people often envied, but others came to the realization that Tom and other wealthy upper-class citizens in Tthe Great Gatsby are corrupt. F. Scott Fitzgerald exploits people's’ motives to unveil the upper class’s shallowness even though it appeared to be glorified in his novel The Great Gatsby. Automobiles are a quintessential indicator of wealth and demolition in the novel. The rich people boughtbuy cars despite the fact that they did not …show more content…

Since Tom was born into a family that was fortunately blessed with an abundance of money, he always enjoyedobtained privilege. He became a shallow human being who only feltfeels empathy for himself. Tom supposes that he is the only human in the world. Voegeli interpreted in his work, “Tom Buchanan uses his inherited fortune for low motives that reflect his negligible concern for other people” (Voegeli 3). In Tom’s case, money could simply purchase him happiness-a wife, alcohol, a mistress- and so, there is he saw no need to be kind to others. Tom did not possess exceptional morals and motives: “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 kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made…” (Fitzgerald 179). Both Daisy and Tom, on the surface, appear as wonderful people and as an idol material until they exhibit the corruption that wealth can bring an

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