Summary of The Great Gatsby

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    of how people actually get rich, in his novel The Great Gatsby. But Unfortunately as the story goes on, we begin to see that F. Scott Fitzgerald commits blasphemy and compares one of his deceitful characters to Jesus Christ, a man who never sinned. The American Dream changed Gatsby because Gatsby thought he could “buy” Daisy’s love. The only reason he wanted Daisy was that she symbolized wealth and took on the characteristics of money. When Gatsby was describing what he liked about Daisy he…

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    into the past." The last line of F. Scott Fitzgerald 's infamous The Great Gatsby. The main reason as to why he wrote such a novel was to create a consciously artistic achievement of something that was beautiful and simple, yet intricately patterned. What is really intriguing is why Fitzgerald used Nick as the narrator, or the amount of symbolism he used, as well as what one would make of Nick Carraway 's final statement to Gatsby. Using these elements, Fitzgerald accomplishes the purpose in the…

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    Jay Gatsby: The Manipulator of Reality The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1925, is the story of Jay Gatsby and his inexorable desire to achieve the status and dreams he has coveted throughout his life. The dream of profound wealth in the 1920’s is represented through Gatsby’s road from destitution to extreme wealth and social stability at the time many admired those who had it and those who were impoverished desired to achieve it themselves. Gatsby is willing to change his…

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    The Female Characters in The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is a historical novel. The author employs a narrator, Nick Carraway, to allow insight into the upper class society of New York during the early 1920s. Socially, women enjoyed enormous changes during this era as hemlines shortened replacing long skirts and corsets, hair was bobbed to resemble a more masculine style, and women attained the right to vote. Women, predictably, responded in a variety of ways to these…

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    With the Great Gatsby, the common view of the American dream is achieved through many of the main characters in the story. One of its important factors to the relation, is the valley of ashes. ‘A fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque…

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    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald touches on several themes, but the one of most importance is the one relating the to the pursuit of the American Dream. The American dream was defined as the ideal lifestyle. If you lived the American dream you had wealth or fame, a steady job, a family, and a grand house. It seemed as though, if you were living the American dream, you were living a life of unbroken happiness. America was thriving in the 1920’s. People could afford to look the American…

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    Gatsby As The American Dream The American dream is the distorted idea that everyone is capable of achieving success through hard work and determination and pertaining to the pursuit of happiness. This idealized dream is commonly unattained by many people who rise to face the challenge. In The Great Gatsby, Francis Scott Fitzgerald demonstrates how the wealthy and famous Jay Gatsby symbolizes the American dream. Ignited with motivation and passion, ambition leads Gatsby to become blind to his…

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald explores the difference between social classes during the Roaring Twenties through characters, such as Gatsby, Tom, Daisy and Myrtle, and situations conflicting with women and race in the Great Gatsby. The novel is set in East Egg and West Egg, which are two locations of different class. The people of this novel are either old money, new money, or they have no money. The difference in social classes puts a strain on Daisy and Gatsby’s relationship. Fitzgerald also presents…

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    Fitzgerald experiments with narrative point of view and presents the female characters through a central male consciousness. In the “Great Gatsby” Fitzgerald fully explores the modern woman’s symbolic significance in an era of disintegration. Women in the “Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald are symbols for the different sides of 1920’s feminism. Fitzgerald offers the public an image of a modern young woman sexually liberated, self-centered, fun-loving, and magnetic. Fitzgerald uses women…

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    Great Gatsby Nick is the only decent person in the novel, explain: Nick is the only decent person in The Great Gatsby. Nick lived during a time full of government corruption and extreme laws enforced to ban the supply of alcohol. Unlike the many people in his time nick strived to earn an honest living and proceeded to keep this mindset even when tempted a job offering in this type of field. Nicks ability to stick to his morals made him a very honourable character compared to the rest. In the…

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