Themes of Morality in The Great Gatsby Essay

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    illusion. The exclamation mark emphasises how he is impressed with how Gatsby has crafted this persona. It is important for Gatsby to stress this illusion in keeping the false status that he is a well-read oxford man. He has money to buy books, that he hasn't even opened, but this does not make him educated. In Contrast Jess is an avid reader and Goodman heavily sprinkles her literary…

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    The Great Gatsby chronicles the plight of Gatsby, an enigmatic self-made millionaire, and his efforts to achieve his dream. Gatsby is in love with his former girlfriend Daisy. She left him for the wealthier Tom, who is now having an affair with a woman named Myrtle Wilson. Gatsby and Daisy briefly rekindle their relationship but after its deterioration, Daisy accidentally kills Myrtle with Gatsby’s car. George shoots Gatsby and himself; falsely led by Tom to believe that Gatsby had affair with…

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    The unreachable entity that surrounds the characters and the themes within “The Great Gatsby” are represented by the color gold. F. Scott Fitzgerald captures the brilliant wealth and success that each character strives for, but may not ever completely reach, by the character’s reflection through color. Author Kevin Rea states in his article entitled The colour of meaning in The Great Gatsby that“The party 's blend of yellow (hope) and gold (money worship) is significant. It is this…

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    Many people see me as one of the greatest American authors of all time because of my novel; The Great Gatsby. It wasn’t until when I attended Princeton University that I was exposed to the social scene, and when I first discovered my passion for creative writing. Here is when I first started writing musicals for the school, humorous articles in my University’s newspaper, and stories for the Nassau Literary Magazine. Although, my passion came to a halt when I decided to end my schooling in…

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    remarkably impacts both characters and actions. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, the author uses New York City in the 1920’s as a means of influence on the character’s development and actions. The striving for the American Dream, superficial change in women roles, and the absence of religion, are themes within the novel and American life during the Roaring Twenties. The absence of religion is a key theme of the 1920’s that contributes to the development of the characters and…

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    They were sometimes referred to as the Lost Generation because they had lived through death and began to question the reliability of societal values. Their writing portrayed many common characteristics, among which were the changes in traditional morality…

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    of morality that was amsit during the Jazz Age. “I guess I am too much of a moralist at heart” Fitzgerald wrote, “and really want to preach at people in some acceptable form, rather than to entertain them.” The Beautiful and the Damned demonstrates the downside of the Jazz Age, with its illusion of unlimited money and prosperity that cloud reality. Through The Beautiful and the Damned, Fitzgerald was able to illustrate the moral deterioration caused from the excess that the Jazz Age…

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    Factors in The Great Gatsby vs. Their Eyes were Watching God In our society, social status has always been a major factor in determining one 's identity and maintains reputation, whether it depends on race, class or heritage. The comparisons and contrasts that can be made between the novels The Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald and Their Eyes were Watching God by Zora Hurston are that the main characters struggle to find their identity and fit into their formal societies. Janie and Gatsby are…

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    The Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald contains many subtle, yet obvious, hints at the reality of the jazz age. Fitzgerald creates complex characters that not only intrigue the reader, but also represent a specific theme or group of people who existed in the 1920s. To get the story to mirror the 1920s, Fitzgerald specifically targets the topic of identity and develops metaphors within that topic, he describes the character’s social classes in a specific way, and makes historical references to the…

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    crooked side of the American Dream in his novel, The Great Gatsby, revealing the immorality of his stratum and generation. His…

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