Compare And Contrast The Great Gatsby By Ernest Hemingway

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There is nothing more powerful than the emotions that are brought upon a person that inevitably accompany the sensory descriptors that people experience every moment of everyday. Due to this, many writers incorporate descriptive writing meant to harness precise images that specifically targets sensory-oriented imagery in an attempt to force the reader to better emotionally connect to the literature as well as invent a unique atmosphere. As one of the Time Magazine’s All-Time 100 novels, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and the well-known novel The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway both utilize an imagistic writing style throughout their literature. While both authors include the enticing aspects of imagistic writing, both portray the style in a unique manner. This results in the reader having a …show more content…
The smooth and elegant writing permits the reader to imagine an open and flowing atmosphere. With the countless descriptive adjectives, F. Scott Fitzgerald makes it possible for his audience to interact with the text through the unavoidable vivid visualization that is yielded from the passage. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s tendency to illustrate the setting with simply his diction is continued through the literature, for when Daisy, Nick, and Gatsby entered Gatsby’s mansion and “went upstairs, through period bedrooms swathed in rose and lavender silk and vivid with new flowers, through dressing-rooms and poolrooms, and bathrooms, with sunken baths” (91 Fitzgerald), the scene is clearly painted. The reader is seemingly involuntarily transported into Gatsby’s mansion and left in awe of the unbelievable scene set before them. From the expensive clothing to the intricate details, Gatsby’s mansion is effectively portrayed as an extravagant atmosphere that intrigues the reader. The imagistic writing style that is presented in The Great Gatsby creates countless atmospheres that are perceived differently by the reader and have a long-lasting impact on how they view

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