Scott Schwartz

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    Page 19 of 50 - About 500 Essays
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    In The Great Gatsby, F. Stott Fitzgerald shows the change in America’s morals in the “Jazz Age” using characters like, Daisy, Gatsby, Tom, and Myrtle. The Great Gatsby, shows the change in our society after World War I, by using characters who had changed over time. This time period known as the “Jazz Age”. During this time America’s morals were changing and society was changing as well. The first appearance of morals changing, is when Tom is cheating on Daisy with Myrtle showing that husbands…

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    Great Gatsby Meaning

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    materialistic disgrace. When The Great Gatsby is analyzed, one of the most frequent themes discussed is the American Dream, in which everyone has a chance to attain riches and social status. For example, in Suzanne del Gizzo’s “Within and Without: F. Scott Fitzgerald”, she writes, “A consumer-based society entailed a departure from… a belief that hard work and thrift yield success... a notion that had…

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    The time of modernism was the time that writes would write in their own ways. The book The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald was about the roaring 20’s at New York. This book is about Nick Carraway becomes obsessed with his neighbor Jay Gatsby that later on they become the best of friends. The modernism area was from the 1920s’ to the 1930s’ which at this point authors wrote like how they talked. A theme from The Great Gatsby is wealth can’t cure isolation and loneliness with is expressed with…

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    have those three things was every American’s goal, and it was what attracted foreigners to America. Wealth, stability, and success are also the major components of what is known as the “American Dream”. Throughout the novel, The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the American Dream is a major theme. The belief surrounding the American Dream is that, with lots of hard work, wealth, success, and stability are all achievable. To achieve the American Dream, however, sacrifices must be made –…

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    Of all the famous authors from the “roarin’ 20s," F. Scott Fitzgerald is by far one of the most memorable. His works seem to touch the readers of the time and even touch us today. Through his techniques of double vision, use of verbs, etc, and his themes of the American dream, emotions, and more. In the beginning, Fitzgerald wrote his novels with expansive and speculative rhetoric. But towards the end of his career, his novels began to become fast paced and action filled, almost as if they…

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    The Shades of Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald 's novel, "The Great Gatsby", is one of only a handful couple of books he wrote in 1925. The novel happens amid the 1920 's after the first World War. It is composed around a young fellow named Nick, from the east he moved toward the west to find out about the bond business. He winds up moving beside a baffling man named Gatsby who winds up giving him the injury of his life. Throughout the book, it indicates how the experience of selfless and World War…

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    The book tells the story of an extraordinary millionaire named Jay Gatsby as narrated by Nick Carraway. Gatsby lives in a huge mansion next to Nick’s humble home. Nick develops curiosity about his neighbor following an invitation to one of his extravagant parties. Nick’s cousin, Daisy, is married to Tom Buchanan. Buchanan and Carraway were acquainted at Yale. One day, Tom takes Nick for a drive in the city and reveals that he has an affair with Myrtle Wilson, who is married to George. Meanwhile,…

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    Throughout The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway is the only point of view we are given about the lives between these characters, Fitzgerald uses Nick as a way to establish the motif of loneliness by showing that even though Gatsby has everything one wishes for during this time, he is still deep down alone because he is surrounded by fake love and care; however, Nick himself is also isolating himself the most by not being involved and only being the observer. There are many moments throughout the…

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    The Grail of Gatsby’s Fantasy “You can’t start the next chapter of your life if you keep re-reading your last one” (Anonymous). Why do we focus so much on the unchangeable past which is so out of our control instead of looking towards our changeable future. If more people focused on improving their futures instead of their pasts, the world would be a happier place, because then we would be able to learn the value of acceptance in the things we cannot change. If someone had imparted this…

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    To be an American in the 20th Century meant that you were in pursuit of the American Dream, or, “the ideal that every US citizen should have an equal opportunity to achieve success and prosperity through hard work, determination, and initiative”. The finish line shown in our mural represents the American Dream, with each character seeing a different goal for themselves at the end of it. The four different lanes represent the different paths the characters had to take to achieve their dream. This…

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