Symbolism in The Great Gatsby Essay

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    Fitzgerald’s used in The Great Gatsby. Significant Recurring symbols reveal the underlying inner thoughts and emotions of characters as well as Fitzgerald’s own perception about plot events. Death and decay, light and dark, nature, and eyes are all symbols of significance that appear repeatedly. The symbol of Death and decay reveals Gatsby’s diminishing dream of hope as the novel progresses; as well it plays a part in foreshadowing the tragic events in the end of The Great Gatsby. The idea of…

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    The Great Gatsby, of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s work of the same name, is an interesting character, in having effectively invented himself. In Chapter 6 of The Great Gatsby, we learn of the figurative birth of Jay Gatsby, as the brainchild of James Gatz, introduced with: “Jay Gatsby, of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself” (Fitzgerald, 98). Gatsby as a “Platonic conception” gives a good deal of insight into the character of Gatsby — him seeming to be a very popular…

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    decadent life of the American upper class. In The Great Gatsby, Daisy was known as “golden girls”, Jordan had yellow hair like withered leaves and Gatsby tied golden tie. To win Daisy, Gatsby always shows off his wealth. He held various parties in his villa frequently. And everything in the party is yellow, such as champagne, oranges, lemons, pastry pigs and turkeys bewitched to a dark gold. Even orchestra was playing yellow cocktail music. Gatsby tried every shift about money available to touch…

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    in The Great Gatsby. In the novel, gold was a common theme, seen on objects ranging from clothing to vehicles or even characters, themselves. Often, when gold is mentioned in literature, it is traced back to its original form: currency. Dating far back into history, gold has been used as trade and represents wealth and riches. The precious metal has been used to show prestigiousness and extravagance since its discovery. Relating back to the American dream, the whole theme of The Great Gatsby,…

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    When I finally get to New York, however, I am going to drive out to Cow Neck and Great Neck, the rumored real life West and East Egg, respectively. And possibly on my drive from the city, I will find myself passing through a bleak landscape, a valley rid of hope and promise, well at least it was in the 1920s when it was used as an important setting in F. Scott Fitzgerald's masterpiece. Throughout The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald contrasts West and East Egg with The Valley of Ashes to demonstrate how…

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    blue is associated with sadness, green with envy, and pink with love. F.Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby, chronicles Jay Gatsby’s relentless pursuit of his long lost love, Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby’s pursuit of this forbidden love brings Gatsby from the lowest of the lows to the highest of the highs, and eventually this love takes a fatal turn. In The Great Gatsby the use of color symbolism is an essential tool which articulates the new America of the 1920’s. Gold has forever fascinated…

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    Similarly, Fitzgerald, author of The Great Gatsby and Hawthorne, author of The Scarlet Letter use the color white to characterize Daisy Buchanan as that of a pure woman of society and the act of Holy matrimony in Puritan society, the effect of which is to relate to themes such as the values of Godly Puritan Society and impossible love. In The Great Gatsby, Daisy, is characterised in multiple chapters as wearing white clothes, being of a pale white complexion and owning white possessions such as…

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    Symbolism is used to express the deeper meaning of something that seems ordinary, and often times they contribute to the novel on a significant basis. In The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the use of symbolism is prevalent throughout the novel. One of the most important symbols that appears frequently in this literature are the eyes of T.J. Eckleburg. There are many reasons as to why they exist. Because this book includes many aspects of the nineteen-twenties American Dream, this symbol…

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    In literature authors use symbolism to add or represent meaning that goes beyond what is actually being said. Within the significance of the author’s word choice readers get a better insight on the symbolism in the novel. In The Great Gatsby, a novel, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is all about the roaring twenties and their American Dream. The main character, Jay Gatsby, is willing to do what it takes to be a part of old money and relive the past with his love, Daisy Buchanan. Along the way we learn…

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    Symbolism adds meaning and requires readers to think more deeply about the story along with the characters and objects in the story. Symbolism can take an object that is just any other ordinary thing and turn it into the author’s entire purpose for writing the story. The Great Gatsby is a magnificent example of this literary technique, because of how well this story utilizes symbolism. If Fitzgerald had not included symbolism in his work, the story would seem to have no meaning at all, because…

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