Daisy Flashcards

You may prefer our related Brainscape-certified flashcards:
1
Q

What does she say when she gives birth?

A

“I hope she’ll be a fool — that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” - Zelda was accounted to have said this

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2
Q

Ceiling

A

“frosted wedding-cake of the ceiling” - wants people to view their marriage as perfect and pure

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3
Q

Murmur

A

“Daisy’s murmur was only to make people lean towards her”

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4
Q

Laugh

A

“absurd, charming little laugh”

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5
Q

Face

A

“Her face was sad and lovely” - contradictory, hints to elusive nature

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6
Q

Voice

A

“There was an excitement in her voice that men who had cared for her found difficult to forget”
“her voice glowing and singing”
“Her voice is full of money”
manipulative

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7
Q

Refers to her child as

A

“the baby”

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8
Q

Simile describing appearance

A

“flower-like way”

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9
Q

Connotations of Daisy’s name

A
  • ‘Daisy’ - flower, beauty, fragility, association with white
  • ‘Fay’ - from the medieval word ‘fairy’. Again, this is associated with delicate beauty and shows Daisy is associated with magic/dreams and therefore is unattainable - “she could not help tumble short of his dreams” - Liks to American Dream
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10
Q

Critic - White

A

Darren Morton - the colour white shows Daisy is a ‘blank canvas’ which men project their desires on to.
Ronald Berman agrees and says she is “part idea”

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11
Q

Jordan + Daisy’s dresses

A

“dresses rippling and fluttering as if they had been blown back in after a short flight”
“fluttering”/”flight” - connotations of softness, fragility
This image is interrupted by the onomatopoeic “boom” of Tom shutting the windows - juxtaposition of masculine and feminine - early hint of male dominance in novel

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12
Q

What does she compare nick to

A

a “rose. An absolute rose” - meaninglessness compliment emphasised further by repetition.
Nick admits its emptiness: “I’m not even faintly like a rose” yet still falls under her spell

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13
Q

“White”

A

associations with purity, suggests that she is idealised by men rather than seen as sexual (contrast to Myrtle’s brown muslin dress)
Fitzgerald never says that she and G sleep together - wants to focus on emotional affair

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