Distortions of the American Dream: The Effects of Materialism in Day of the Locust and the Great Gatsby
In both The Day of the Locust and The Great Gatsby, pursuit for the superficial and material in the world has become their driving focus, blurring the line between right and wrong. In this paper we will look at how materialism affects both Jay Gatsby and Tod Hackett.
We can see what direction the main protagonist in Day of the Locust, Tod Hackett, will go, just by looking at the word "hack" in his name. While in school he has decided to pursue the field of commercial illustration instead of pursuing the more rigorous field of painting art for arts' sake. His friends warn him that he is selling out. Tod has taken the possibility of a great education at Yale and has decided to help create superficial images of things that cannot be real for movies in Hollywood.
Jay Gatsby has taken a more overtly financial route. He does not claim to be an artist. He simply wants to accumulate wealth for what it will get him, in particular the love of Daisy Buchanan. While Hackett changes the focus of his trade to get ahead, Gatsby changes his last name from Gatz, believing that Gatsby will open more doors. Again there is a pun in the name. Reversed, his name is pronounced "be Gatz."
The issue of driving for money is not as overtly obvious in Day of the Locust as it is in The Great Gatsby, but it is there as an assumption. The movie industry is driven by large amounts of money, and those successful in it gain as least as much wealth as they do fame. Important characters in both books are clearly driven by money. Faye rejects Tod because he has neither looks...
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