Themes of Morality in The Great Gatsby Essay

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    Franklin to Jay Gatsby for F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. This comparison of Ben Franklin to that of Jay Gatsby will examine the way in which cultural factors such as morality, technology, and societal norms of their respective time periods affected their worldview and ultimately set the stage for how their stories are told and ultimately the outcome of their respective lives. It is my contention that Ben Franklin is successful man of his age brought about by the cultural theme of his…

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    A tragic hero is a person with heroic potential who is fated by some supernatural force, eventually leading to destruction or to great suffering. F. Scott Fitzgerald, wrote one of his utmost famous novels, The Great Gatsby, that focused on Jay Gatsby, a romantic fantasist who wishes to fulfill his American Dream by flaunting his wealth in hopes of impressing and eventually winning the heart of the love of his life, Daisy. Gatsby’s tragic flaws lie beneath his incapability to view reality,…

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    saying, “It took critics a long time to recognize that a writer like Fitzgerald could be more than superficially romantic, an even longer time to realize that he was, as a novelist, intuitively historical” (Eble, 3). While Fitzgerald’s novel “The Great Gatsby” pervades under many high school student’s repertoire today, the novel was not truly recognized as a classic until 73 years after it was published and 58 years after Fitzgerald had died. Since then, Hollywood has taken the reigns on the…

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    The Great Gatsby has been hailed as one of the classic American novels and has been regarded as such due to F. Scott Fitzgerald's strong grasp of language and writing. Despite being veiled in the pomp and glamour of the Roaring Twenties, the novel explores darker themes such as corruption and morality. Over the course of The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald develops the intertwined themes of decay and corruption through the use of literary devices in his descriptions of the valley of ashes, the voice of…

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    It is a recurring theme in life, history, and literature, that there is an ordinary man behind every extraordinary one. In the Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald’s character and narrator Nick Carraway is by all means an ordinary man. After growing up in a prominent family in Chicago, going to Yale, and fighting in World War One, Nick moves New York City to start a life in the bond business where he first encounters Jay Gatsby, the paradigm of a truly extraordinary man. After getting a taste of the…

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    take time to develop. When morality vanished in what is known as the Roaring Twenties and the Jazz Age, the 1920’s became a “beacon of light,” an extravagant and charming era, where corrupt decisions brought about complicated relationships, death, and dissatisfactions. The Great Gatsby, a tremendous novel written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrays the immorality and the shamelessness of the energetic, quick paced life of the 1920’s. The main protagonist of the novel, Jay Gatsby, is a mysterious…

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    Gatsby Modernism In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby, an ambitious and lonely man, alienates himself from society with his outrageous dream of a perfect life with Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby lives alone in his West Egg mansion which sits directly across the water from the Buchanan residence which is located in East Egg. Gatsby longingly reaches for the green light which shines at the end of the Buchanan’s dock. This green light represents Daisy and the fact that Gatsby can only…

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    In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald many symbols are used to support the themes and characters. The Valley of Ashes is a symbol that represents death, poverty, moral decay, and the unattainability of the American Dream. It reveals a lot about the themes, such as the gap between the hollow rich and the hopeless poor, and the characters, like Myrtle and George Wilson’s lives and deaths. The Valley of Ashes was a dumping ground between Long Island, or the East and West Eggs, and New York…

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    Preface The Great Gatsby is the symbol of Fitzgerald’s greatness. Although it was treated indifferently when it was published, it had gained its fame gradually by 1960s. Finally, it was recognized as the most important work in the Jazz Age. In the past, there were lots of pieces of writing on The Great Gatsby. For example, The Great Gatsby and Fitzgerald’s World of Ideas, by Ronald Bergman, focused on Fitzgerald and the prevailing conception and value, demonstrating that how they influenced the…

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    De Vito Mrs. Rainone English III 9 June 2017 Moral Decline and It’s Consequences in Society Moral values in society set boundaries of the individual behaviors and dictate ways in which the community members should behave or carry out themselves. Morality is very paramount since it is major factors which enhance peace, acceptance, meaningful life, teamwork as well as development in the society. Moral values seem to be on the brink of decline in our community. Currently, less individual in our…

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