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Comparison Of The Lost Generation In The Great Gatsby
The 1920s witnessed a dramatic social and political change. The nation's total wealth had doubled
between 1920 and 1929, and this economic growth swept many Americans into an affluent but
unfamiliar 'consumer society.' Moreover, 'The Lost Generation' represented a group of writers in
1920s who shared the belief that they were 'lost' in a greedy, materialistic world that lacked moral
values and often choose to flee to Europe. And one particular example was F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was the only son of an unsuccessful father and a provincial mother. His
father was obsessed with the literature in his time, so he named Fitzgerald after the author of 'The
Star–Spangled Banner', Francis Scott Key. He spent two years of ... Show more content on
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In July 1918, while he was stationed near Montgomery, Alabama, he met Zelda Sayre, the daughter
of an Alabama Supreme Court judge. They fell deeply in love, and, as soon as he could, Fitzgerald
headed for New York determined to achieve instant success and to marry Zelda. In 1920, their
marriage was held and spent most of his life with Zelda in New York. Zelda was a wild child, who
smoked, drank alcohol, and snuck out of her parents' house to spend time with boys when she was in
high school. Her friends described her as fearless, daring, and attention–seeking. Their marriage was
incredibly tumultuous. It was reportedly a toxic marriage, complete with alcoholism, mutual
infidelity, and jealousy. . In 1924, Fitzgerald got a flight to France and joined 'The Lost Generation'.
Then, in 1934, he published 'Tender is the Night', which described this society. In 1930, Zelda
suffered her first nervous breakdown and moved to various clinics in Switzerland. Fitzgerald
published the short story 'One Trip Abroad,' about an American couple who fall apart in Europe.
Then he met Ernest Hemingway and had a rocky friendship with him. However, Zelda was over–
jealous and accused her husband of having a gay relationship with his friend and fellow writer
Ernest Hemingway. And in the end, he died of a heart attack while writing his last novel, 'The Last
Tycoon.'
'The Jazz Age' was the name Fitzgerald
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Nick Carraway 's ' A Sanitarium For Alcohol And Depression '
In a sanitarium for Alcohol and depression, Nick Carraway writes an account of the Summer of
1922, the summer he spent in New York City and on Long Island with his cousin Daisy and her
husband Tom Buchanan, their friend and famous golfer Jordan Baker, and of course the famous Jay
Gatsby. Nick rents a house on Long Island in the West Egg, the "new money" types as in the people
who earned their wealth instead of having it handed down to them. Nick finds that he lives next to a
very famous and mysterious Jay Gatsby. A man never seen or heard from but his parties are the
place to be for anyone who is anybody in New York. Nick states that the summer began when he
drives over to his cousin's house for lunch. Daisy lives in the East Egg, where all the "old money"
types are, fortune handed down to the next generation. Here is where Tom, Daisy, and Jordan enter
the picture. After Nick arrives back home, he is invited to one of the infamous parties thrown by
Gatsby. After arriving, he hears countless numbers of stories about this "ghost host" but none seem
to match or make much sense, until he meets the real Gatsby, and all is explained. This all sounds
like some worn out soap opera a stay at home wife gets addicted to, however, it is actually the plot
of F. Scott Fitzgerald 's novel The Great Gatsby written in 1925 and made into two different movies;
the Paramount Pictures version of 1974 and the 2013 Warner Brothers version. Fitzgerald created a
timeless classic when writing, but
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The theme of carelessness in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott...
"I couldn't forgive him or like him, but I saw that what he had done was, to him, entirely justified. It
was all very careless and confused. They were careless people, Tom and Daisy–– they smashed up
things and creatures and the retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it
was the kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made" (Fitzgerald 180–
181). In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the characters Daisy and Tom
demonstrate the theme of carelessness. Tom and Daisy show carelessness through being foolish thus
lacking a lack of good sense or judgment. Furthermore, they both show the theme of carelessness by
being inconsiderate of others. The theme of negligence is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
'You forget there's a lady present,' said Jordan. Daisy looked around doubtfully 'You kiss Nick too.'
'What a low, vulgar girl!'
'I don't care!' cried Daisy, and began to clog on the brick fireplace." (Fitzgerald 116) It is evident that
Daisy's words "I don't care" show that she is inconsiderate of other peoples' feelings. She rudely
shows her affection for Gatsby in public without considering the fact that Nick and Myrtle are
present. In addition to being inconsiderate of Nick and Jordan, Daisy is inconsiderate to Tom as
well. "She looked at him [Tom] blindly. 'Why––how could I love him––possibly?'" (Fitzgerald 132)
It is extremely inconsiderate to be telling Tom–– the man to whom she is married–– that she never
loved him. Therefore, even though Tom showed carelessness through being inconsiderate of Daisy,
Daisy was the more careless one because she was inconsiderate of more people as a result of her
behaviour. These people include Nick, Jordan, and Tom.
Finally, both Tom and Daisy show carelessness through being foolish. Tom Buchanan exhibits
foolishness by physically harming Daisy. "We all looked. The knuckle was black and blue.
'You did it, Tom,' she said accusingly.
'I know you didn't mean to, but you did do it. That's what I get for marrying a brute of a man, a
great, big, hulking physical specimen of a––'" (Fitzgerald 12) This is significant because since Tom
was foolish by acting on impulse, Daisy got injured. Even though Daisy described that Tom did not
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Summary of The Great Gatsby and The How the Life of F...
Nick Carraway, a young man from a comfortable background, moves from Minnesota to New York
in order to pursue business. He rents a house in the West Egg district of Long Island, an area filled
with the newly rich but considered unfashionable. Upon arriving, Nick visits his cousin Daisy
Buchanan and her husband Tom whom he attended Yale with. The Buchanans live in the East Egg
district, just across the harbor from West Egg and inhabited with those who come from wealthy
families. While at his cousin's house, he meets a cynical woman named Jordan Baker and learns
about his legendary neighbor, Mr. Gatsby. In addition, Nick learns that Tom is currently engaged in
an extramarital affair with a woman named Myrtle Wilson. A couple days later, ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
In his nervousness, Gatsby begins acting arrogant and rude but as the afternoon progresses Nick aids
Gatsby. By the time for departure, Daisy and Gatsby are very fond of each other and choose to
continue the rendezvous at Gatsby's house. After a short period of time, Tom grows suspicious of the
relationship between his wife and the man from West Egg. When Gatsby is invited to dine with
Daisy and Tom, Gatsby passionately watches Daisy throughout the meal. Tom quickly notices and
becomes furious, insisting that the party visit New York City. He takes them into the Plaza Hotel and
begins fighting with Daisy and Gatsby, exclaiming that Gatsby is a criminal. After Nick calms Tom
down and all tears subside, the group returns to their homes in West and East Egg, Daisy and Gatsby
in one car while Nick, Jordan, and Tom return in another. On the way home, Nick, Jordan, and Tom
come upon a violent wreck and soon discover that the woman who fell victim is Myrtle Wilson,
Tom's lover. As details about the crash come forward, the group slowly realizes that Gatsby's car
took her life. Myrtle's husband, George, becomes hysterical and decides that the driver of the car hit
her on purpose and also had an affair with her. While wandering, searching for the car, he shows up
at Tom's house prepared to kill. Tom tells George that it was Gatsby that hit Myrtle. Furious, George
shows up at Gatsby's house to find Gatsby outside
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Lost and forgotten. These are the two qualities that F. Scott Fitzgerald and his novel The Great
Gatsby had in common. That is, until college students resurrected the story in the 1940s after
Fitzgerald's death. Born in St. Paul, Minnesota and eased into a life of mixed wealth and modest
means, Fitzgerald developed a fascination with money and wealthy people. After his father lost his
job, Fitzgerald vowed to never become a failure like his father. So, he wrote. He ended up going to
Princeton University, where he partied excessively. He ended up meeting a love interest in Ginevra
King, a girl who would alter the path of his life forever. Coming from a wealthy background,
Ginevra was a tier above Fitzgerald. Her father eventually told Fitzgerald that, "Poor boys don't
marry rich girls." The heartbroken Fitzgerald spiraled into a state of depression and flunked out of
Princeton. After that, he had an obsessive desire to relive the past up until his early death at the age
of 44. As with many highly acclaimed literary work, various film producers have tried to capture the
spirit of the novel in a 90–minute or less motion picture. A daunting task, filmmakers struggle
deciding which components of the novel are essential to the film, may it be scenarios, characters, or
conversations. In 1974, movie director Jack Clayton produced his own adaptation of the novel. Then
in 2013, Baz Luhrmann did the same. Many people debate which film is better, in respects to
accuracy, appeal, and
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The American Work, The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
To many of us writing can be a daunting task, and often more complicated than it should be, but, as
stated by famed American author Ernest Hemingway, "There is nothing to writing, All you do is sit
down at a typewriter and bleed'. The fact of the matter is, eventually blood clots, and scabs form. It's
the same in writing; many authors bleed onto a page and use their metaphorical blood as ink, thus
placing a piece of themselves into their work. But, no matter how great the author, eventually writer
block ensues, casting a writer into a literary funk and halting the flow of thematic ideas; however,
themes such as love and wealth transcend time, culture, and language. So it's not difficult to think
that famed authors, when in a pinch, often recycle broad themes to create a more compelling and
relatable story. In the American work, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and its cinematic
counterpart, directed by Baz Lutherman, themes such as wealth, love, isolation, and dissatisfaction
are used to create a novel that still holds parallels to the world of today.
The theme of wealth is prevalent in the works of the The Great Gatsby. The wealthy are portrayed as
educated businessmen who have found a prosperous niche, often illegally. Persons with enough
money are held in higher esteem than their middle class compatriots. In Gatsby's world money buys
social acceptance, and it also grants living in the world without repercussions. In chapter four of The
Great Gatsby, Gatsby, on his
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
The classic novel, The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a story that uniquely captures the
transformational period of the 1920's in America. It elegantly flows between conflicts of new
money, young love, and care–free parties, illustrating the diverse issues of these influential times
into captivating characters, all of whom gossip and live in the drama of the age. Most of the time,
the drama is centered around money and wealthy people, because nearly every character in the book
identifies people by their wealth rather than their personality. This materialistic view constantly
creates conflict and tension between characters, which leads readers to see that people should be
assessed based on their core qualities rather than their luxuries. However, in the 2013 film
adaptation directed by Baz Luhrmann, this theme is obscured, particularly in the portrayal of the
relationship between Daisy and Gatsby, and various cinematic techniques. From the novel to the
film, the ironic conveyal of the theme of material wealth should not define a person's worth more
than their character was lost, thus weakening the prominence of the theme throughout the film.
The film obscures the theme of the novel in its use of symbol. In the novel, the symbol of shirts is
prominent when after Gatsby reunites with Daisy and invites her over to his mansion on page 99,
"he took out a pile of shirts and began throwing them, one by one before us, shirts of sheer linen and
thick silk and fine flannel
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Great Gatsby Journal
The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is written in the 1920 's during the prohibition,
and the characters values and goals really shaped the theme. The book was written about how people
lived and acted during the 1920 's. This paper will cover; how the values and goals of the characters
were shaped by the values and goals of people in the 1920 's, how the values and goals of the
characters shaped the setting of the novel, and lastly the overall theme of the novel.
The values of the people in the 1920 's shaped the characters in the book The Great Gatsby. Some
might ask how people in General could shape the characters of the book, well F. Scott Fitzgerald
based the characters off people he observed in the 1920 's and even off his own lifestyle. His
characters like Gatsby that throw parties for people all the time show the lifestyle of how people
partied, and really didn 't care if alcohol was against the law. Even though Gatsby wasn 't the one
doing the partying he still broke the laws of the 1920 's by having alcohol. Characters like Tom, and
Myrtle broke the law of consuming alcohol enough for everybody. The author shows how much
Tom drinks by including this sentence in the book, "Meanwhile Tom brought out a bottle of whiskey
from a locked bureau door"(33). The quote states that Tom drinks alcohol and shows us that he
already planned to have a gathering in advance. In the book, religion is never really mentioned, and
this is
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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
The narrative point of view adopted by F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby supports the novel's
criticism of the upper class and the importance of wealth in society. Fitzgerald uses Nick Carraway
as the narrator who views the upper class as entirely superficial. Through his observation of people
at Gatsby's party, at the beginning of chapter three, Nick seems to feel that the wealthy are clones of
a stereotype accepted and created by themselves. To him it seems as though this society is based on
appearance and recognition and judges people according to how much they own rather than what
they believe in. Nick's criticisms are accepted by the reader as impartial because Nick is the only
major character who is not preoccupied with wealth. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
He says that his family have been 'prominent well–to–do people' for three generations and that they
were hesitant in approving his decision to join the bond business in New York. He talks about
having a dog, his old Dodge and a Finnish woman who helps him around the house and ends by
saying that he had 'that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer.' At
this point, by opening up to the reader, a close relationship has been established between the two
which is set to last throughout the novel. Nick's opinions and criticisms are accepted by the reader as
impartial which greatly influences the reader's interpretation of wealth and the wealthy. Nick is the
only major character who is not preoccupied with money or power or belonging to a particular class.
This sets him apart from the characters he and the reader are observing and allows him to be used as
a measure for other characters. Nick further sets himself apart by being the only person who does
not form relationships based on class and money. All around him, people are carefully choosing
whom they will be 'friends' with based on how much money they have and if they belong to the right
social class. When Nick first goes to Gatsby's party he feels 'uneasy' because he has never met his
host however most of the people there were not even invited and they don't feel uneasy at all. By
distancing himself from this corrupt upper class Nick comes across as the most honourable person
there and
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Views of Entitlement in the Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby as Fitzgerald's explanation of an American Reality which contradicts the
American Dream
That was always my experience–a poor boy in a rich town; a poor boy in a rich boy's school; a poor
boy in a rich man's club at Princeton.... However, I have never been able to forgive the rich for being
rich, and it has colored my entire life and works."
–F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Life in Letters, ed. Matthew J. Bruccoli. New York: Scribners, 1994. pg. 352.
The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, has been celebrated as one of the greatest – if not the
greatest – American works of fiction. Of course, one could convincingly argue that Gatsby barely
qualified as fiction, as it is the culmination of a trio of Fitzgerald's work that ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
The culture of the wealthy Americans represented in The Great Gatsby was defined mainly by
consumerism and excessive material wealth. Wherever given the opportunity, Jay Gatsby went over
the top, as shown in his flamboyant style of dress and his huge mansion where he throws lavish
parties. This is actually not all that different from Fitzgerald's life. After his first work was published
to great fanfare, Fitzgerald was the talk of the town. As was the case with Gatzby, many of those
around him did not – and never would – actually know Fitzgerald. They wished merely to be close
to someone famous. Fitzgerald shunned all the attention, eventually moving to France. It was there
that he looked at the supposed American Dream from a different perspective. To Fitzgerald, it was
clear that the sudden wealth that many Americans began to acquire caused leisure and idleness to
replace traditional ethics like hard work as qualities that were admired. (Decker, 28) Certainly the
Buchanans and Gatsby cared little about hard work once they had achieved their material goals.
Gatsby believed that in order to fulfill his own concept of the American Dream he needed to win
Daisy's love, and to do that he would need to "establish himself as Somebody." Although he loves
Daisy, he also sees her as more of a goal – a step toward the perfect life promised by the American
Dream. In a way, Gatsby views Daisy much the way
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The Great Gatsby Character Analysis
Francis Scott Fitzgerald, the author of a book widely renowned as the greatest American novel, is
known for his tendency to insert autobiographical elements within his works of fiction. Within The
Great Gatsby itself, Fitzgerald wrote scenes and storylines from his own corrupted and perverse
experiences, ones brought about by his damaged psyche. The greatest examples of Fitzgerald's
personal biography within The Great Gatsby are the amoral female characters which he wrote.
Nevertheless the fact that the 1920s are widely regarded as the era in history when feminism first
began to have a fighting chance, Fitzgerald wrote his female characters as destructive forces who are
less than their male counterparts and have to be controlled. Fitzgerald's misogynistic opinions are
present in Daisy, a woman villainized despite being under the control of others, Jordan, a corrupted
girl who negatively represents the feminism of the jazz age, and Myrtle, a character who was written
more like an animal than she was a woman. Drawing from his own negative experiences with
women, including unhealthy obsessions with those out of his social league and an affair–ridden
marriage with his wife, Fitzgerald branded his female characters within The Great Gatsby with
practically irredeemable qualities, revealing his sexist ideals and intentions. Fitzgerald's second
greatest inspiration for his female characters, following his wife Zelda, was Ginevra King, a
debutante from Chicago with whom Fitzgerald shared loving correspondence with for many years.
However, Fitzgerald's relationship with Ginevra ended upon her choosing of a wealthier suitor as
her fiancé rather than the poor Fitzgerald, who had become infatuated with her by the time of the
engagement (Noden np). The relationship ended in toxicity, with King claiming their letter–heavy
relationship to be nothing more than flirtation and Fitzgerald starting "Which bitch do you think you
are?" as a reply to King's wondering of which characters she inspired (Fitzgerald qtd. in Noden np).
Fitzgerald's relationship dynamic with Ginevra is very much evident in the relationship between Jay
Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan, which tells the story of a poor soldier reinventing himself for a rich
debutant
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F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald uses Nick in The Great Gatsby to develop a new view of the American dream by
exploring the illusion of unending pleasure that it seems to provide. At first glance the American
dream promised success and wealth that was almost limitless. An era characterized by extravagant
parties and displays of wealth was built on an illusion that it would continue without end. Soon,
people lost track of the work that got them there and began to be concerned more about the display
of wealth than actually having it. This began to lead to an illusion of wealth built upon a
materialistic view of society. The materialistic illusion began to be eroded upon despite attempts to
stifle the advances of nature ("PROSPERITY"). This controversy ... Show more content on
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This points to him as unreliable to narrate. He is not able to realize that Tom has not been suspected
at first. Tom is an image of the materialistic man (Stratton). Nick's inability points to the depth that
the illusion has permeated society. Nick's inability and lack of decisiveness fails to fill out a
complete picture of what is happening around him. This uncertain narration emphasizes an
uncertainty in what is actually happening and points to a distinction between reality and what is
happening behind the scenes (Cartwright 3). This further reinforces the illusion that is the American
dream. Nick contradicts himself by judging Gatsby's war story, comparing it with a simile to
"skimming hastily through a dozen magazines" (Fitzgerald 66; ch. 4). Nick is judging a story where,
"its subject is realistic, its detailing local and concrete, and the whole internally consistent,"
(Cartwright 6). This further develops Nick as unreliable as a narrator. Nick's unreliable narration
helps to divulge the illusion that permeates the society around him. Nick is established as a balance
between nature and materialism to emphasize the conflict that is hidden beneath the illusion of the
American dream. Nick is able to see both the materialism and nature without bias. The light makes it
seem as though, "my house was on fire" (Fitzgerald 81; ch. 5). By using a metaphor to compare the
light from Gatsby's
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The Great Gatsby Research Paper
During the Roaring twenties, social class was an important aspect of society. All different classes
were for the most part separated by where people lived. In other words, by no means would anyone
from a lower class be caught in an uptown setting. There are a variety of characters in the novel that
come from different economic backgrounds. In the novel, The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald
successfully uses location to differentiate social status amongst his characters while the weather and
seasons of those locations help guide them. Each character helps represent and support the
differences of social class and the four main locations, The East Egg, the West Egg, the Valley of
Ashes, and New York City. In The Great Gatsby ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
In addition Gatsby has also made his fortune through criminal activity, as he is willing to do
anything to gain the social position he thinks necessary to win Daisy. The Valley of Ashes represents
the socially unaccepted. The characters in the Valley of Ashes represent poverty. "This is the Valley
of Dry Bones, the Waste Land, The dusty replica of modern society, where ash–grey men are
crumbling, like Eliot's hollow men" (Bicknell 98). Myrtle and George Wilson both live in a run
down garage in the Valley of Ashes. Myrtle Wilson tries desperately to improve her life and get out
of the Valley of Ashes. The Valley of Ashes also represents doom and death. Myrtle is found as the
victim of a hit and run caused by Daisy and Gatsby. The Valley of Ashes represents the death and
dreams for Jay Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson, and George Wilson. These characters die in the novel due to
misconception and anger. The characters go through the Valley of Ashes to get to New York City.
New York City represents glitz and immorality. While in New York City Tom Buchanan has an
affair with Myrtle Wilson. Myrtle Wilson doesn't care about anyone except those who will direct her
on the correct path to improve her life. This is one of the reasons why she has an affair with Tom.
Tom Buchanan has no moral doubts about his own extramarital affair with Myrtle but when it comes
to other people such as Daisy and Gatsby he becomes outraged and forces a
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Illusion and Reality in The Great Gatsby Essay
Illusion and Reality in The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a novel about
one man's disenchantment with the American dream. In the story we get a glimpse into the life of
Jay Gatsby, a man who aspired to achieve a position among the American rich to win the heart of his
true love, Daisy Fay. Gatsby's downfall was in the fact that he was unable to determine that
concealed boundary between reality and illusion in his life. The Great Gatsby is a tightly structured,
symbolically compressed novel whose predominant images and symbols reinforce the idea that
Gatsby's dream exists on borrowed time. Fitzgerald perfectly understood the inadequacy of Gatsby's
romantic view of wealth. At a young age ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Buchanans represent cowardice, corruption, and the demise of Gatsby's dream. Gatsby, unlike
Fitzgerald himself, never discovers how he has been betrayed by the class he has idealized for so
long. For Gatsby, the failure of the rich has disastrous consequences. Gatsby's desire to achieve his
dream leads him to West Egg Island. He purchased a mansion across the bay from Daisy's home.
There is a green light at the end of Daisy's dock that is visible at night from the windows and lawn
of Gatsby's house. This green light is one of the central symbols of the novel. In chapter one, Nick
observes Gatsby in the dark as he looks longingly across the bay with arms stretched outward
toward the green light. It becomes apparent, as the story progresses that "the whole being of Gatsby
exists only in relation to what the green light symbolizes This first sight, that we have of Gatsby, is a
ritualistic tableau that literally contains the meaning of the completed book" (Bewley 41). A broader
definition of the green light's significance is revealed in Chapter 5, as Gatsby and Daisy stand at one
of the windows in his mansion. "If it wasn't for the mist we could see your home across the bay,"
said Gatsby. "You always have a green light that burns all night at the end of your dock." "Daisy put
her arm through his abruptly, but he seemed absorbed in what he had just said. Possibly it had
occurred to him that the colossal significance of that light had vanished
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Love and Wealth in the Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald...
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a novel about a rich socialite, Jay Gatsby, who tries to
win back his love, Daisy Buchannan. Nick Caraway, Daisy's cousin, is the narrator who brings the
reader through the time of the roaring twenties to tell the story of Jay Gatsby. The 1974 film of The
Great Gatsby, directed by Jack Clayton, follows the detailed storyline closely by mirroring it, but
also adds and takes away some aspects of the story. There are many comparisons that can be made
as well as contrasts through the actor, scenery, music, and script choices for the film. The actor
choices from the film compare to what the book envisioned, but also contrast. The character of
Daisy is not similar in the film to what the book ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The scenery choices for the film matched up well to what was expected from the book, but some
choices contrasted greatly. The Valley of Ashes was well portrayed in the film. The Valley is "...a
fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens..."
(Fitzgerald 27). This shows that the Valley of Ashes is not a pleasant place to be in and is looked
down upon. In the film, the interpretation on the Valley is spot on. It shows a dirty, sad little town,
filled with depressed people. A second scenery choice that is well depicted in the film is the
Buchannan's home. It is described to be very elegant and grand filled with beautiful furniture.
Throughout the scenes in the Buchannan's house, the "grandness" is well represented through the
furniture, landscaping and exterior chosen for the house. The exterior of Gatsby's house does not
match up to its description in the book. "The one on my right was a colossal affair by any standard–
it was a factual imitation of some Hotel de Ville in Normandy, with a tower on one side..." is how
Gatsby's house is described (Fitzgerald 9). In the film, the house that is Gatsby's doesn't nearly stand
up to what's pictured from the book. It is large, but is not as striking as described. Nick's house is
also different from expected. In the film, Nick's house is rather large and nice in contrast to the
"...small eye–sore..." as described in
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The Great Gatsby Report
One of America's utmost renowned books happens to be The Great Gatsby, generally read by high
school and college students, then again commonly misunderstood. This book subsisted during the
Prohibition era which influenced Fitzgerald significantly in his writing. What numerous people fail
to realize is the meaning that the book entails in addition to its resemblance to the author. The Great
Gatsby exists as an extremely real and historical book that grasps the reader's attention and
transports them to an incredibly real place amongst Fitzgerald's personal life, which society survives
unknowledgeable of and deserves to reread and gain an enhanced understanding. F. Scotts
Fitzgerald's birth took place on September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota ... Show more content on
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Identical to that of Jay Gatsby, he attended Oxford, a recognized academic school. In addition,
Gatsby "only stayed five months. That's why [he] can't really call [himself] an Oxford man"
(Fitzgerald 129) which closely parallels Scott's experience with Princeton, considering he never
graduated. During Fitzgerald's time at Princeton he formed a romantic interest with a woman named
Ginevra King. This woman can be described as being a beautiful, young debutant which Scott
escorted to sundry amounts of parties and football games. One evening Scott was in Ginevra's
hometown and overheard someone state that "poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls"
(Baughman and Bruccoli 17). She seemed to share the same opinion because by late 1916 Ginevra
chose to pursue the attentions of wealthier young men. He attended Princeton in 1913, nonetheless
by November 1917 he enlisted in the army and left the scholarly institution. From these details of
Fitzgerald's life, it is safe for one to assume that he is portraying himself as Gatsby trying to steal
away Daisy's heart, or in Fitzgerald's circumstance,
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F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby
Douglass 1
Morgan Douglass
Mrs. Fry
3B
Color Symbolism in The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald is an author known for his best–selling book, The Great Gatsby. The story is
about a man, Jay Gatsby, who was in love with Daisy Buchanan. Daisy was married to Tom, but
Tom was cheating on her with Myrtle Wilson. There were two islands the story took place in: East
Egg and West Egg. East Egg was the "old money," or money passed down from ancestors, while
West Egg represented the "new money," or self– made money. Fitzgerald used multiple types of
symbolism in his book, and his symbolism helped the reader understand the plot. The novel is read
throughout schools to teach symbolism. The book can be described as "[...] satisfying as
entertainment, thought provoking as a study, and increasingly rewarding the more closely it is
examined." (Koster). A frequently used type of symbolism in The Great Gatsby was color. The
colors symbolized in the book were white, green, yellow, blue, gold, and gray.
The color white normally represents pureness or innocence. In The Great Gatsby, though, it
represented a fake innocence. Daisy was always around white: white clothes, white curtains, and
white rooms. Even her name was symbolized with white. A daisy flower has white petals and a
yellow center. Daisy was not anywhere close to the picture of innocence; she was all about money
and would try her hardest to get it. She married Tom Buchanan for the money,
Douglass 2 even if she wasn't happy with him.
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gattom Importance of the Automobile in The Great Gatsby...
The Importance of the Automobile in The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby was written about a time of gaiety for a certain set of people.
One of the major thematic aspects of the book is driving and the automobile. At the time the book
was written the car had begun its establishment as a national institution. This is apparent in one of
the central events in the book. Tom's unfaithfulness first comes to light from a car accident in Santa
Barbara. He misguides the car and the misdirection of his life is made glaringly evident. The
automobile affected Fitzgerald and it influenced the writing in The Great Gatsby.
Driving is equated with living. Nick Carraway, describing their ill–fated trip from New York in ...
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Tom is hulking and has a definitive presence, much like a large car or bus. Tom drives a station
wagon, extremely utilitarian. In the end, Tom becomes Daisy's choice because, like a station wagon,
he is large, solid and the easiest way to go. On the other hand Gatsby's car is described as "a rich
cream color, bright with nickel, swollen here and there in its monstrous length with triumphant
hatboxes and supper–boxes and tool–boxes, and terraces with a labyrinth of windshields that
mirrored a dozen suns"(68). This description can be very accurately applied to Gatsby as well as his
car. He is white, but does not resonate with the same WASP purity that the Buchanans do. Thus he
can be construed as "cream" colored. He is very brightly rich but there is falseness to it, much like
nickel instead of silver. He is "swollen here and there" with the rumors about who he is and where
he is from. These rumors bolster his image and swell him up. He has many boxes, or occupations,
and many different faces that line him and define him like the various boxes that define the car. The
most accurate comparison of all is that of Gatsby and his car's labyrinth of windshields. The image
this creates is a glass maze, apparently easy to see through but difficult to solve. He provides a
mirror for the sun and happiness of everyone else, not only those at his parties, but Daisy as well.
These mirrors and windshields take the attention away from him, and protect him from the
revelation
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The Defiance Of Gender Stereotypes
Naomi Mash
Mr. Cole
Honors English III
15 October 14 The Defiance of Gender Stereotypes in Fitzgerald's, The Great Gatsby
Throughout the 1920's, before Women's Suffrage, women were viewed as inferior, as well as
subordinate to males because of many years of patriarchal dominance. In F. Scott Fitzgerald's, The
Great Gatsby, women are seen as lesser by the male characters, yet show a great sense of power and
domination over the actions and storyline. The major plotline of Gatsby's love for Daisy and the
American Dream circulates around the mere factor of the power women have over men. Fitzgerald's
portrayal of women parallels with the 1920's societal reflections on how men are viewed as
dominant, whereas women are treated as second–class citizens. Daisy, Jordan and Myrtle are
portrayed poorly through their insouciant view on the world, objectification by their male
counterparts and their narcissism, but defy the stereotypes of the 1920's.
In The Great Gatsby, the characters, male or female, let their narcissism control their actions and get
the best of them. Daisy is shown to care more about herself than her daughter, flaunting off the child
as an object of, not pride, but a reflection of herself. Daisy remarks, " All right...I 'm glad it 's a girl.
And I hope she 'll be a fool –– that 's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool"
(Fitzgerald 21), showing that she is aware of her own narcissism and marginalization, yet how she
chooses to
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F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby
Jay Gatsby and F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald is an acclaimed American author, popularly recognized for his novel The Great
Gatsby. In addition to his literary work, Fitzgerald is noted for his unstable personal life. Originally
coming from a low–income background, he could not marry the woman that he first loved. Even
when he met another woman, he had to acquire wealth to marry her; this drove him to publish his
first novel. He married her shortly after. However, a couple years after, he turned to alcohol and his
wife had a mental breakdown. Fitzgerald had to constantly work to pay for his wife's medications.
Not having close friends to whom he could express his life struggles, Fitzgerald conveyed his
difficulties through his writing. In the novel The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald used the character Jay
Gatsby to mirror his own life.
Fitzgerald enrolled in the military for a short period of time, according to Matthew Bruccoli in
"Some Sort of Epic Grandeur". He writes, "...he enlisted in the army as a second lieutenant" (1).
Likewise, Jay Gatsby decided to join the military for some time. Fitzgerald and Gatsby not only
share similar job experiences, they also share corresponding backgrounds.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, like Jay Gatsby, originates from a destitute environment. Fitzgerald's family was
excluded from elite society. Gatsby coincidentally grows up under similar circumstances. He was
born and raised on a farm in North Dakota. F. Scott Fitzgerald writes in the The
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F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby Essay
Man dreams of living the life of the elite social class and of the power and admiration inherent
within. F. Scott Fitzgerald comes to terms with this American dream in The Great Gatsby, a novel
about social life in the 1920's. The social hierarchy of the times plays a very important role in this
novel. Here Fitzgerald illustrates three specific social classes: old money, new money, and lower
class, with old money and new money taking center stage. Gatsby himself personifies new money;
he made himself into a rich man through shady dealings. Tom Buchanan, on the other hand,
represents old money. He received everything he has on a silver platter. He earned nothing but his
inheritance. At the time, it was extremely desirable to be old money, ... Show more content on
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Tom refuses because marrying into a lower social class would develop into even more of a scandal
than having a mistress. This corrupted American dream prevents Tom from openly allowing Myrtle
into his life. Old money's highly discriminating nature allows its members to attain superiority,
while this self–serving superiority further enhances their American dream. The attempts of new
money to imitate old money remain futile. For example, although Daisy truly loves Gatsby, he
represents new money. Despite his attempts to become old money, the old rich have never embraced
him. Daisy cannot be with him because he is not and never will be of her class. Gatsby even offers
to take the blame for a murder she committed, yet she will nott even leave her husband for him.
"'Was Daisy driving?' 'Yes,' he said after a moment. 'but of course I'll say I was.'" (p.
151). Daisy allows Gatsby to take the blame for her without showing either remorse or gratitude. In
this way, Fitzgerald shows that although old money people count themselves rich monetarily, they
show a lack of morality and accountability. Daisy's carelessness and irresponsibility cause her to
need others to clean up after her without caring who takes the fall. Old money's arrogance and
haughtiness make their misguided American dream more of an American nightmare. The elite
created the American dream in order to make themselves and others think they are superior. They
are not, in fact, above all others, but have
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Biographical Effects Of The Great Gatsby
Biographical effects in The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald lived during the Jazz age, much like his own experiences, Gatsby encountered
ambitions, challenges and desires. Through the use of important events in his own life, F. Scott
Fitzgerald reflects his own ambitions such as a trying to find meaning in life Overcoming challenges
that arose with the Jazz age, such as the introduction of liquor, leading to addiction. And desires,
including romances and fortune, through the main character in his novel, The Great Gatsby.
Throughout F. Scott Fitzgerald's life, he struggled to find meaning. He eventually dropped out of
Princeton as he was failing many of his classes, which made him enlist in WW1. Unfortunately he
was unable to achieve anything great while fighting overseas. In his novel, the character Jay Gatsby
is an accomplished war hero who even received awards for his bravery. contrast from Scott
Fitzgerald, and represents his yearning for achievement during the war, as Jay Gatsby reminisces
with Nick, he flaunts his war achievements, '"I was promoted to be a major, and every major allied
government gave me a decoration–even montenegro... that's the one from Montenegro. 'Major Jay
Gatsby' I read, 'For Valour Extraordinary.'"(35) Gatsby clearly holds impressive titles, however Scott
Fitzgerald possessed little opportunity for anything even remotely as impressive. Jay Gatsby was
given the opportunity to study at Oxford University after the war, in contrast to Scott Fitzgerald who
dropped out of Princeton University to fight in the war, to no avail. "It was an opportunity they gave
to some of the officers after the Armistice," he continued. "We could go to any of the universities in
England or France."(71) Scott Fitzgerald's ambition for achievement through war or education are
reflected through Jay Gatsby. Scott Fitzgerald lived during the time of the Jazz age, one of the
U.S.A's rowdiest time periods. As a result, he got into some bad habits, including heavy drinking
which would eventually become a major factor in the deterioration of his health, this was also
during the 20's when alcohol was illegal and was obtained
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Symbols and Symbolism in The Great Gatsby Essay
Symbolism in The Great Gatsby
Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby has more relevance in today's society than it did when it was written.
With the recent societal trend that emphasizes lack of morals and material wealth over a meaningful
existence, Fitzgerald's message really hits home. Which is more important – money or love? Social
status or being true to oneself? Fitzgerald uses metaphor and symbols to great effect in order to
illustrate what can happen when the pursuit of happiness becomes warped (by American ideals) into
the pursuit of money.
One of the major symbols in the novel is the color green. Green represents the hopes and dreams of
people striving to accomplish the American dream of wealth and glory. ... Show more content on
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The valley of ashes represents the byproduct of a nation obsessed with money. It is filled with the
gray industrial ashes of the factories that helped to catapult dreamers to the top of the world. It also
symbolizes the lower class. The people living in the towns nearby are described as gray and solemn.
They are washed up because they were unable to accomplish their goals and fulfill the American
dream. Wilson, for example, is described as someone with "an ashen, dust veiled suit" and "pale
hair." The ash heap is described as a place "where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills." As
those ashes pile up, they bury the hopes of people seeking the American dream.
The towns of East and West Egg are also symbolic. The people of East Egg represent those who
already have wealth from inheritance. The people of West Egg represent those people who have
gained their wealth through hard work and business. Gatsby has lots of money but he will always be
"subtly incompatible" with the affluent society of East Egg. East Egg also represents old money and
the east coast, whereas West Egg represents new money and the west coast. Throughout the novel,
characters openly rebuke the west. For example, early in the novel Nick says, "Oh, I'll stay in the
East, don't you worry."
The weather is another symbol that is used primarily for the purpose of setting the general mood of
the book. Moments of death
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What Does Daisy Symbolize The Lost Person In The Great Gatsby
Scott Fitzgerald, the author of The Great Gatsby, was an intellectual and miserable person. His
family was affluent but became decadent in his generation. As a man who was interested in
literature, Fitzgerald always fail in the university exams because he spent most time on writing. He
fell in love with a girl called Ginevra King. However, King's family was wealthy, and her father
against the relationship between King and Fitzgerald. In fact, King's father told Fitzgerald that a
poor guy would never marry a rich girl. Later, Fitzgerald joined the army and prepared for the World
War I. Nevertheless, the war ended before he went to the battlefield. After the war, Fitzgerald fell in
love again with a girl. Unfortunately, the girl refused to be ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
From my point of view, Daisy symbolizes the lost generation because she was confused about the
goal of life, did not have a strong stand, and was extremely materialistic. Besides, Daisy was
sophisticated and good at tricking others. She promised Gatsby that she would wait for him before
he joined the army. To Gatsby, Daisy was paragon of perfection. I think Daisy represents the women
who are untruthful and ruthless. They attract men and tried to make benefit from those men. As an
idiom says, "people who fall in love are blind" in other words, those females are conspirators
because they make those men totally believe them and they deceive the males. As a result, those
men become scapegoats and they do not realize that they were used by those malicious women. In
fact, Daisy was a typical example of this kind of women. Her charming and fancy backgrounds
made Gatsby lost his intellect and willing to do all things for her. Gatsby became the killer of Myrtle
Wilson though he clearly knew that Daisy was the murder. What is more, Daisy viewed Gatsby
completely as a tool. In fact, instead of attending Gatsby's funnel, Daisy chose to leave with Tom by
leaving no address. Therefore, Fitzgerald depicted Daisy as a representative of the worldly and
fickle
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An Autobiographical Portrayal of F. Scott Fitzgerald as...
Frances Scott Key Fitzgerald, born September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota, is seen today as one
of the true great American novelists. Although he lived a life filled with alcoholism, despair, and
lost–love, he managed to create the ultimate love story and seemed to pinpoint the ¡§American
Dream¡¨ in his classic novel, The Great Gatsby. In the novel, Jay Gatsby is the epitome of the
¡§self–made man,¡¨ in which he dictates his entire life to climbing the social ladder in order to gain
wealth, to ultimately win the love of a woman: something that proves to be unattainable. As it turns
out, Gatsby¡¦s excessive extravagance and love of money, mixed with his obsession for a woman¡¦s
love, is actually the autobiographical portrayal of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Although heartbroken at the time, Fitzgerald answered Yeats¡¦ crucial question–– ¡§Does the
imagination dwell the most / Upon a woman lost or a woman won?¡¨ –– by using his lost love as
imaginative inspiration. For in his 1925 masterpiece, The Great Gatsby, he recreated the elusive,
unattainable Ginevra as the beautiful and elegant Daisy Fay Buchanan.
Throughout the novel, Fitzgerald described Daisy as an almost disembodied voice which, Gatsby
realized at the end, was ¡§full of money.¡¨ Fitzgerald wrote, ¡§her face was sad and lovely with
bright things in it, bright eyes and a bright passionate mouth, but there was an excitement in her
voice that men who had cared for her found difficult to forget¡¨ (Fitzgerald, 14). It should be noted
that, ¡§Gatsby¡¦s ability, like Fitzgerald¡¦s, ¡¥to keep that illusion perfect¡¦ sustains his self–deceptive
and ultimately self–destructive quest, with the help of his own fabulous money, to win Daisy back
from her husband¡¨ (Meyers, 30).
Although Ginevra King was Fitzgerald¡¦s first true love, she certainly was not his last. In July 1918,
while stationed in Montgomery, Alabama with the military, Scott met a gracious, soft–voiced girl
named Zelda Sayre at a country club dance. Scott recalled that night that, ¡§she let her long hair
hang down loose and wore a frilly dress that made her look younger than eighteen. She came from a
prominent though not wealthy family and had just graduated
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
The famously written book, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, provides many details, which
help to provoke the meaning behind this narrative. The use of symbolic objects helps to connect the
significance of the story on a deeper level and eventually reveal its literal meaning. Many symbols
portrayed throughout The Great Gatsby, such as the green light, the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg,
Gatsby's Mansion and the weather help to uncover one of the main themes–the American Dream.
First, the green light located at the end of Tom and Daisy Buchanan's dock, in East egg, plays a
considerable role in Gatsby's life. In chapter 1, we first encounter Gatsby's attraction with the green
light. When Nick Carraway sees Gatsby for the first time, he ... Show more content on
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The color green maintains a more promising effect as opposed to the color red or yellow, therefore
giving Gatsby hopefulness for the future. This color also signifies Gatsby's main objective in life–
money. With money come ambition and jealousy, which also implies societies appeal and the
superficial hopelessness of achieving the common theme of the American Dream. Second, perhaps
one of the most well known symbols of this book, as well as in literature, are the eyes of Dr. T.J.
Eckleburg. The billboard, overlooking the Valley of Ashes, is up to promote the business of an eye
doctor (Dr. T.J. Eckleburg). The eyes, which make up the advertisement, watch over the main
characters as they pass underneath on their way into New York City. These eyes observe as Tom
carries on his disloyal affair, as Gatsby drives Nick into town to meet Meyer Wolfshiem (man who
fixed the world series), and also these eyes observe the yellow car and the individual who ran over
and killed Myrtle Wilson. In chapter 8, Wilson affiliates Eckleburg's eyes to the eyes of God. After
discovering Myrtles affair with Tom Buchanan, Wilson articulates to Myrtle: "God knows what
you've been doing, everything you've been doing. You may fool me, but you can't fool God!"
(Fitzgerald 159). This indicates how strongly Wilson feels about the "eyes" and the correlation
between God's judgment and Myrtle's affair. Adultery is seen as a sin
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Aiswariya Ramaswamy
Mrs. Orrick
ELA 11, Hour 4
12 December 2014
Happiness is the Key to Success The concept of success is commonly misinterpreted by society
solely as the achievement of certain materialistic goals. In literature, this idea is disproved through
the in–depth analysis of a character's emotional turmoil and internal conflicts in contrast to their
success in social and economical aspects. F. Scott Fitzgerald, in his novel The Great Gatsby, reveals
that true success involves two levels: worldly possessions and emotional nirvana. Jay Gatsby serves
to epitomize Fitzgerald's view on how monetary success does not always lead to the attainment of
one's ultimate goal of satisfaction and euphoria. Gatsby has all the wealth and influence a man could
wish for, yet he is chronically isolated and delusional when it comes to the aspect of love and claims
that "[He] will fix everything it just the way it was before... She'll [Daisy] see" (Fitzgerald, 110).
This statement proves that Gatsby's ultimate goal was not to increase his net worth, but to use the
money in order to lure Daisy back into his life and attain emotional exuberance. As time progresses
in the novel, it is apparent that Gatsby's unhealthy desire for Daisy increases even as his wealth
proliferates, and his fiscal success only seems to create further agitation. In the novel, Gatsby's
lavish parties make him the talk of the town, and he is envied by society since their view of success
is solely financial. This
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
According to the newspaper company The Telegraph, daisies can become "serious weeds" and have
the ability "thrive in generally inhospitable conditions." This informative description of a common
daisy mirrors F. Scott Fitzgerald's character, Daisy Buchanan. In his novel, The Great Gatsby, Daisy
tries to preserve the stability of her wealthy lifestyle through her marriage with Tom Buchanan
instead of pursuing true love with Gatsby. Daisy becomes monotonous and dependent on wealth to
act as an equilibrator of her life. Her dependency becomes uncontrollable, and that like that
beautiful, innocent flower, she becomes a vile weed rooted in corruption. Fitzgerald implements
Daisy as a way to convey the innate destructive property of wealth; it ... Show more content on
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Already, the effects of wealth is immediately taking place, almost an instantaneous reaction. She
prioritizes her ambitions over the possibility of finding true love. However, after meeting the new
Gatsby, she is attracted to his material wealth: "He [takes] out a pile of shirts and [begins] throwing
them, one by one before us, shirts of sheer linen and thick silk and fine flannel...While we admired
he brought more and the soft rich heap mounted higher" (92). The shirts are symbolic of Gatsby's
heaping wealth and as the "heap mounted higher," she continues to be amazed by the immense and
accumulating amount, and beauty of the shirts. The tempting diction of "soft" and "rich" appeals
greatly to Daisy because she desires a cushion, security, in order to maintain her wealth. Gatsby
intentionally flaunts the extravagant display of wealth through his shirts in order to make himself
more appealing to Daisy, by assuring her of his wealth that can support her. However, Daisy did not
choose Gatsby because of the unpredictability concerning his future. In Daisy's youth, "her artificial
world was redolent of orchids and pleasant, cheerful snobbery and orchestras which set the rhythm
of the year, summing up the sadness and suggestive of life in new tunes" (151). The label of Daisy's
world as "artificial" reveals the bridging partnership between privileges and pretension, that along
with privilege is the burden of pretension and "sadness." In order
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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Flappers, innovation, invention, prosperity, cars, industrialization, the Jazz Age. These are all words
that come to mind when one thinks of the 1920's in America. Many people believe it was a great
time in American history, however these individuals are only seeing one side of the story. Yes, the
1920's were a time of growth in some area's of society, and were portrayed as a time that allowed
people to be free and be themselves, a time where people could finally let loose. However, this
could not be further from the truth. People lived in slums, multiple families packed into tiny houses,
discrimination thrived, diseases spread uncontrollably. Those who were fortunate enough to avoid
these problems because they were wealthy had to deal ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
While the majority of the characters in The Great Gatsby are wealthy, upper class individuals,
Fitzgerald does not fail to display the living conditions of those less fortunate. He does this through
the Valley of Ashes, a place Nick describes as "...a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into
ridges and hills and grotesque gardens... gray land and the spasms of bleak dust.."(Fitzgerald 23).
Nick continues to use the words gray and crumbling throughout the rest of the story to symbolize
the dismal lives people who lived there led, as opposed to the rich, colorful lives the upper class
enjoyed. As the book progresses, the reader learns more and more about the stark differences
between the gray Valley of Ashes and the sparkling world of East and West Egg, yet most of the
wealthy characters never even acknowledge that the place exists. Instead, they continued their lives
of opulent wealth, while many families were struggling to survive. Besides the characters in Gatsby,
real groups of people faced adversity that went somewhat unnoticed. One of these groups was the
African Americans living during this time. One person who illustrated the challenges African
Americans faced was Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes. Through his poem "Refugee in
America" he was able to show how African Americans were free of
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Nick Carraway as Honest Liar in Fitzgerald's The Great...
Nick Carraway as Honest Liar in Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby
"Everyone suspects himself of at least one of the cardinal virtues, and this is mine: I am one of the
few honest people that I have ever known" (Fitzgerald Gatsby 64). So writes Nick Carraway in F.
Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, characterizing himself in opposition to the great masses of
humanity as a perfectly honest man. The honesty that Nick attributes to himself must be a nearly
perfect one, by dint of both its rarity and its "cardinal" nature; Nick asserts for himself that he is
among the most honest people he has ever encountered. Events in the book, however, do not bear
this self–characterization out; far from being among the most honest people in ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
The discussion immediately preceding the characterization is most pressing on an interpretation of
this self–characterization, as it provides a clear example of Nick's dishonesty just moments before
he claims to be perfectly honest. Nick says of Jordan Baker, "Her grey sun–strained eyes stared
straight ahead, but she had deliberately shifted our relations, and for a moment I thought I loved her"
(63). But, however, before he could actively pursue Miss Baker, he acknowledges, there was one
little matter he had to deal with:
But I am slow thinking and full of interior rules that act as brakes on my desires, and I knew that
first I had to get myself out of that tangle back home. I'd been writing letters once a week and
signing them 'Love, Nick'...Nevertheless there was a vague understanding that had to be tactfully
broken off before I was free. (64)
Immediately preceding his statement about being one of the few honest people he has ever known,
he admits to both falsely proclaiming his love and perpetuating a "vague understanding" he had no
intention of fulfilling. What's more, Nick takes his long–belated decision to now, finally, deal with
the situation as evidence of his perfect honesty–ignoring entirely the preceding weeks and months of
deception!
This matter of the "girl back home" warrants further study. This is the girl whom Daisy and Tom ask
about, and the subject of whom Nick clearly (and
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Comparing the Great Gatsby and American Beauty
Set in the summer of the Roaring Twenties, The Great Gatsby follows the hedonistic and destructive
lifestyles of the upper social classes of post–war America. This novel, written by F Scott Fitzgerald
in the same time period, criticizes the shallowness of the actions of this outlandish generation and
their eventual disillusionment with their society. American Beauty, the 1999 film directed by Sam
Mendes and written by Alan ball, uses the setting of contemporary middle–class suburban America
to examine the differences between the inner and outer realities of a "typical" American Beauty are
obvious in connection between Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and Mendes' American Beauty are
obvious in the themes, plots and the actions of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The colossal dream that Gatsby builds up and holds onto eventually becomes his downfall and is the
most prominent illustration of the failure of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby.
Although it is the repercussions of their deceptive fantasies that Gatsby and Lester fall victim to, it
was their continued search for love that leads them to these. Love is the principal value in The Great
Gatsby and is illustrated best by the contrast of Gatsby's idealized romantic love for Daisy with
Daisy's "love" for wealth and status, a love which is common to the majority of their irresponsible
society. F Scott Fitzgerald emphasizes Gatsby's "romantic readiness" through this contrast as well as
Gatsby's fall from grace that results in him becoming lost in "the colossal vitality of his illusions"
(pg. 92). Daisy characterizes the power of a love of money in the Great Gatsby and is used by
Fitzgerald in condemning Gatsby's hedonistic society as well as his own. However it is the absence
of love –rather than the presence– that is most prominent in American
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The Great Gatsby American Dream Failure Essay
The Great Gatsby is a 1925 novel that was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The American Dream is
the main theme of this novel; this is what Gatsby's life depends on. The underlying cause for
everything that happens in the novel is an idea, an idea towards which everyone strives and dreams
of. This unattainable, destructive, and hindrance dream, as Fitzgerald calls it, is the American
Dream. What exactly is The American Dream some might ask? Well this dream could change from
person to person, but through Fitzgerald's character we see that is of wealth, success, and generally a
high position in society. Fitzgerald shows us as the reader, that this dream is unattainable by the way
that Gatsby's dream dies due to Daisy. From these two characters Fitzgerald shows a failure in
accomplishing this dream. In the novel ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Fitzgerald makes a big point that the American Dream is nothing, but an obstacle in people's future.
The American Dream is like the green light; when people want it they stay focused on that one
thing, and will do anything to have it. Often times though people lose sight of reality and forget
about others around them or just lose feeling all together. When you have lost the sight of reality
there is no future that is ahead of you so there really is no place to go. The American Dream is an
imaginary dream that prevents people from living there life the way they should and having a future.
Once that dream is gone or the green light fades that person has nothing to live for, just like Gatsby.
Gatsby's life was over as soon as Daisy left; he had nothing to look forward to or even live for. His
life revolved around the American Dream. He was always living in the yesterday and no the today as
Fitzgerald said "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past"
(Fitzgerald 180). No matter how hard we try we are always going to be brought back to where we
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Essay on Symbols of The Great Gatsby
The 1920s were a time of big dreams, moral decline, and hardships in America . The Roaring
Twenties were a different time altogether with its bootleggers and speakeasies, women becoming
more independent, the poor becoming poorer, but through all this was The American Dream keeping
the hope afloat. F. Scott Fitzgerald captured this era in his book, The Great Gatsby. Through his
many symbols he illustrates the hopes, the forgotten God, and the oppressed Americans of the
Twenties. The symbols in The Great Gatsby help convey several different themes, from wealth to
loss of morals, to poverty.
The green light in The Great Gatsby is an ambiguous symbol. The green light is deceiving at first,
tricking the reader into thinking it is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
" (Fitzgerald 98). The green light then changes its meaning to despair for now it is but a dream, a
wistful, hopeless dream. Once Gatsby's dream is within reach, his usual parties and extravagances
are changed. "Each step towards the green light, however, shadows some part of Gatsby's grandiose
achievement. With Daisy's disapproval the spectroscopic parties cease. To preserve her reputation
Gatsby empties his mansion of lights and servants. And finally only darkness and ghostly memories
tenant the deserted house" (Koster 37). The green light for Gatsby was a five year dream. The light
is Daisy and hope for the future; however, the green light remains forever across the bay from him,
just out of reach. God seems to be just out of reach as well. God is portrayed as a billboard that
watches over the immoral occurrences of the valley of ashes. He is nothing more than a pair of eyes
put there for business purposes and then forgotten. God was put on the back burner in the 1920s ,
while social lives and personal wants were brought to the front burner. "But above the grey land and
the spasms of bleak dust which drift endlessly over it, you perceive, after a moment, the eyes of
Doctor T.J. Eckleburg...Evidently some wild wag of an oculist set them there to fatten his practice in
the borough of Queens and then sank down himself into eternal blindness or forgot them and moved
away ." (Fitzgerald 27) God has been belittled to nothing more than an
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The American Dream Is Hard to Achieve in the Great Gatsby...
The American Dream is hard to achieve The Great Gatsby", written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrays a
world filled with rich societal activities, love affairs, and dishonesty. Nick Carraway is the busy
narrator of the book, a curious choice considering that he is in a different class and almost in a
different world than Gatsby and the other characters. Nick relates the plot of the story to the reader
as a part of Gatsby's circle. He has hesitant feelings towards Gatsby, despising his personality and
corrupted dream but feeling drawn to Gatsby's wonderful ability to hope. Using Nick as an
honorable guide, Fitzgerald attempts to guide readers on a journey through the novel to show the
corruption and failure of the American Dream. To achieve ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net
...
101). Gatsby is disappointed that the woman he loves is not really who he wants her to be. Gatsby
wants a better life and he thinks he can do it if he puts his mind to it, which is also a part of the
American Dream. Nonetheless, Gatsby's dream collapses when he fails to win Daisy and is not
accepted by the upper class. All his money cannot help him when old man Wilson fires a gun at him.
Gatsby sees himself as a failure when Daisy chooses Tom instead of him. The failure of Gatsby's
hoped for life relates to the failure of the American Dream. Without his dream Gatsby has nothing,
nothing to keep him going, no direction, and no purpose to live. Myrtle, who represents the low and
ignorant class of America, tried to break the social barriers and thus pursues wealth by any means
necessary. Using her sexuality and crude appearance, she becomes false for abandoning and
dismissing her own social foundation, and like Nick, we as readers are disgusted by her monstrous
approach to entering the rich class. At one point, and quite humorously to the knowing onlooker,
Myrtle complains about a service done for her that was so expensive. Obviously misusing her
wording, it is comical only because she is trying so hard to fit into the stuck–up upper class
personality, and failing miserably. Her rudeness becomes more
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Parties, flappers, jazz, alcohol, and change are all ways to define the boisterous, extravagant era
known today as the Roaring Twenties. Women especially set the stage for transforming society, as
they broke tradition and advanced into the world. They earned money for themselves, became
independent, and were able to voice their opinion with the freedom to vote. F. Scott Fitzgerald
emphasizes the emerging woman and her willingness to break free from social standards and create
her own customs in The Great Gatsby. Daisy, a submissive woman, relies on her husband Tom's
money to provide happiness, yet rebels and has an affair with her true love, Jay Gatsby. Jordan
Baker mirrors the pretentious and irresponsible flapper personality and challenges gender roles by
pursuing a career in golf. Lastly, Myrtle Wilson, an outsider, participates in an affair with Tom
Buchanan, yet falls into his trap of violence. All three of these women imitate similar personalities
of women in Fitzgerald 's own life. Daisy mirrors Fitzgerald's unrealistic dream, Ginevra King, and
his wife, Zelda, while Jordan resembles Fitzgerald's friend, Edith Cummings, as they both pursued
the career of golf and propelled themselves into society as independent women. In The Great
Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald emphasizes the contrast between the expectations of women's behaviors
before and during the 1920s, while focusing on the emergence of the "new woman" and the new
freedoms of women in relation to the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Symbolism in the Great Gatsby
Symbolism in The Great Gatsby
In the novel The Great Gatsby by Francis Scott Fitzgerald there are many different kinds of symbols
used. Fitzgerald uses colors and material luxuries as the two main symbols in the novel. The author
uses these symbols most frequently in the novel. The symbolism is carefully incorporated within the
novel which makes it hard to detect at first glance. Within these symbols Fitzgerald mainly
expresses feelings and the American Dream.
Fitzgerald uses colors like an artist in his novel. Each color represents a different feeling or has a
different meaning. He uses the color yellow to symbolize moral decay and death, the color white to
symbolize innocence, and the color green to express hope. Fitzgerald's use of ... Show more content
on Helpwriting.net ...
When Gatsby returned to pursue his dream, he knew that Daisy is married Tom. He desperately
wanted to get back together with her so much that he bought a house where he could see Daisy's
house from his. Gatsby was able to pick out a green light at the end of her dock, and often looked
toward it. That green symbolized as Gatsby's deepest feeling and goal in this book. Gatsby was so
close to his goal of being with Daisy; however, the hard work that he put into his life to get where he
was to achieve his goal unfortunately was not enough because his life had ended. "Another
symbolization the color green has in this novel is an urge to strive ahead in life, to do better in life
and succeed. Gatsby changes his entire persona for a better, more sociable, image and status. He is
constantly striving to be a more successful figure in society" (Schneider 14). Ever since Gatsby was
a boy he put himself on a schedule with hopes for becoming a successful, highly respected, and
well–known person. "He knew he had a big future in front of him. (Fitzgerald 181)," his dad says
about Gatsby. "Jimmy was bound to get ahead. He always had some resolves like this..." (Fitzgerald
182).
White is the other color that is used as a symbol in this novel. Where green only influenced one
character particularly Gatsby, white has a wider range of influence on the characters. This color
symbolizes one thing, innocence, but it appears in every
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Affairs, Nick, and Gatsby in Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby
Nick is the narrative reader in The Great Gatsby. Gatz was a poor person that changes his name to
Gatsby. Tom was a cheater and was unfaithful to Daisy. Daisy was a flirt and rich. Myrtle is a poor
women that lived over her and her husband's garage shop. Myrtle would let Tom push her around
because he was a rich man that would let Myrtle forget that she was poor.
"She never loved you, do you hear he cried. She only married you because I was poor and she was
tired of waiting for me (Fitzgerald 139)". Tom is married to Daisy (Lisca). Even though daisy is
marring Tom, Daisy has feeling for Gatsby (Lisca). Tom and Daisy relationship is wrong because
they are married. People may say that Tom and Daisy does not love each other. When it was ... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Nick does not think Tom and Myrtle really loves each other (Hays, "Fitzgerald"). Everyone knew
about Tom's affair with Myrtle expect Myrtle's husband. Nick left Tom and Myrtle at his house
when he went to the store. Nick buys some cigarettes and finds Tom and Myrtle in his bedroom
(Hays, "Fitzgerald").
Daisy accidently ran Myrtle over in Gatsby's car, and Myrtle died (Hays, "Oxymoron"). Wilson
walks to Gatsby's estate, kills him and then kills himself ("Great"... Fitzgerald). Daisy was the one
that took Gatsby's car without knowing and was Myrtle and Daisy hit and kills Myrtle at the scene
of the crime. ("Great"... Fitzgerald). When Myrtle died, Gatsby saying how he feels about Daisy
(Farrant). The reason why Gatsby paid for the mansion is that she would be across the water
(Fitzgerald 85). Gatsby continued getting closer to Daisy (Fitzgerald 84). Gatsby had asked Daisy
for a Dance at a party (Fitzgerald 113). When Tom left the room Daisy, took a chance and walked
over to Gatsby was pulled closer to Daisy so she could kiss him on the mouth (Fitzgerald 123).
Daisy wants to go in town with Gatsby but Tom over heard and he said he wanted to go (Fitzgerald
127). When Tom walked over to Daisy and Gatsby were staring at each other (Fitzgerald 127).
James Gatz was Jay Gatsby legal name when James lived North Dakota (Fitzgerald 104). James
lived in a boathouse instead of a regular house (Fitzgerald 104) James is a poor man that changes his
name
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald
Karen Morgan
Ms. McGowan
English 11A, Period 4
9 January 2014
The Great Gatsby Individuals who approach life with an optimistic mindset generally have their
goals established as their main priority. Driven by ambition, they are determined to fulfill their
desires; without reluctance. These strong–minded individuals refuse to be influenced by negative
reinforcements, and rely on hope in order to achieve their dreams. As a man of persistence, the
wealthy Jay Gatsby continuously strives to reclaim the love of his life, Daisy Buchanan. Throughout
the novel The Great Gatsby, Jay makes a substantial amount of effort to impress, and persuade Daisy
to be reacquainted once again. Providing that, F. Scott Fitzgerald associates Daisy as Gatsby's green
light. Fitzgerald represents the green light in Gatsby's life as a significant role to The Great Gatsby.
In the novel The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby's green light symbolizes his undying passion for an
idealistic goal that he aspires to accomplish; his green light indicates how he uses his wealth in order
to acquire his desire, it also represents his American Dream. Even after five years without Daisy
beside him, Jay Gatsby is still willing to pursue his green light; in spite of his love for her. Time and
time again, Gatsby repeatedly insists that he will recreate the past with Daisy and always states he
will, "Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us"
(Fitzgerald 189). Until the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby: A Life Foolishly Lived
Released in 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby cleverly demonstrates the manners
and morals commonly practiced throughout the time period. The plot revolves around several main
themes and effectively expresses Fitzgerald's unique perspective. With an objective standpoint, Nick
Carraway narrates the story as Jay Gatsby, a foolish racketeer, tries to win over his lifelong love,
Daisy Buchanan. Although pecuniary matters can often be too large of an influence on human
relationships, the novel unveils several powerful battles entangling love, morals, and money.
As Nick Carraway follows the tale of Jay Gatsby pursuing a dream, Gatsby can be observed as a
foolish ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Transforming his name and developing new life values are only parts of the lifecycle in which Jay
Gatsby participates in order to follow his dreams. Although not always successful in creating new
individualities, Gatsby's attempts are fully genuine.
Gatsby struggles to fit into social groups in to which Daisy Buchanan belongs. Daisy and her
husband, Tom Buchanan, often attend parties hosted by Gatsby. Although these parties may be
essentially hosted by him, Gatsby does not wholeheartedly attend. As he shrinks away to other areas
of his home, Gatsby is able to avoid socializing with his guests. "I made an attempt to find my host
but the two or three people of whom I asked his whereabouts stared at me in such an amazed way
and denied so vehemently any knowledge of his movement" (46). This quote demonstrates how
many of the partygoers have become used to Gatsby's nonattendance. Therefore, the primary motive
of his characteristic social gatherings is revealed, to attract the attention and win the heart of Daisy
Buchanan.
Although Gatsby believes his parties may be bringing him somewhat closer to his love, they further
extend the gap between him and other social groups. At many parties, guests often speak of him and
his fictitious past with little concern of his reputation. For example, one guest at a party speaks of
"...he was a German spy during the war" (48) and another speaks of him saying, "I'll bet he killed a
man" (48), while others
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

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Comparison Of The Lost Generation In The Great Gatsby

  • 1. Comparison Of The Lost Generation In The Great Gatsby The 1920s witnessed a dramatic social and political change. The nation's total wealth had doubled between 1920 and 1929, and this economic growth swept many Americans into an affluent but unfamiliar 'consumer society.' Moreover, 'The Lost Generation' represented a group of writers in 1920s who shared the belief that they were 'lost' in a greedy, materialistic world that lacked moral values and often choose to flee to Europe. And one particular example was F. Scott Fitzgerald. Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was the only son of an unsuccessful father and a provincial mother. His father was obsessed with the literature in his time, so he named Fitzgerald after the author of 'The Star–Spangled Banner', Francis Scott Key. He spent two years of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In July 1918, while he was stationed near Montgomery, Alabama, he met Zelda Sayre, the daughter of an Alabama Supreme Court judge. They fell deeply in love, and, as soon as he could, Fitzgerald headed for New York determined to achieve instant success and to marry Zelda. In 1920, their marriage was held and spent most of his life with Zelda in New York. Zelda was a wild child, who smoked, drank alcohol, and snuck out of her parents' house to spend time with boys when she was in high school. Her friends described her as fearless, daring, and attention–seeking. Their marriage was incredibly tumultuous. It was reportedly a toxic marriage, complete with alcoholism, mutual infidelity, and jealousy. . In 1924, Fitzgerald got a flight to France and joined 'The Lost Generation'. Then, in 1934, he published 'Tender is the Night', which described this society. In 1930, Zelda suffered her first nervous breakdown and moved to various clinics in Switzerland. Fitzgerald published the short story 'One Trip Abroad,' about an American couple who fall apart in Europe. Then he met Ernest Hemingway and had a rocky friendship with him. However, Zelda was over– jealous and accused her husband of having a gay relationship with his friend and fellow writer Ernest Hemingway. And in the end, he died of a heart attack while writing his last novel, 'The Last Tycoon.' 'The Jazz Age' was the name Fitzgerald ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2.
  • 3. Nick Carraway 's ' A Sanitarium For Alcohol And Depression ' In a sanitarium for Alcohol and depression, Nick Carraway writes an account of the Summer of 1922, the summer he spent in New York City and on Long Island with his cousin Daisy and her husband Tom Buchanan, their friend and famous golfer Jordan Baker, and of course the famous Jay Gatsby. Nick rents a house on Long Island in the West Egg, the "new money" types as in the people who earned their wealth instead of having it handed down to them. Nick finds that he lives next to a very famous and mysterious Jay Gatsby. A man never seen or heard from but his parties are the place to be for anyone who is anybody in New York. Nick states that the summer began when he drives over to his cousin's house for lunch. Daisy lives in the East Egg, where all the "old money" types are, fortune handed down to the next generation. Here is where Tom, Daisy, and Jordan enter the picture. After Nick arrives back home, he is invited to one of the infamous parties thrown by Gatsby. After arriving, he hears countless numbers of stories about this "ghost host" but none seem to match or make much sense, until he meets the real Gatsby, and all is explained. This all sounds like some worn out soap opera a stay at home wife gets addicted to, however, it is actually the plot of F. Scott Fitzgerald 's novel The Great Gatsby written in 1925 and made into two different movies; the Paramount Pictures version of 1974 and the 2013 Warner Brothers version. Fitzgerald created a timeless classic when writing, but ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 5. The theme of carelessness in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott... "I couldn't forgive him or like him, but I saw that what he had done was, to him, entirely justified. It was all very careless and confused. They were careless people, Tom and Daisy–– they smashed up things and creatures and the retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was the kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made" (Fitzgerald 180– 181). In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the characters Daisy and Tom demonstrate the theme of carelessness. Tom and Daisy show carelessness through being foolish thus lacking a lack of good sense or judgment. Furthermore, they both show the theme of carelessness by being inconsiderate of others. The theme of negligence is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 'You forget there's a lady present,' said Jordan. Daisy looked around doubtfully 'You kiss Nick too.' 'What a low, vulgar girl!' 'I don't care!' cried Daisy, and began to clog on the brick fireplace." (Fitzgerald 116) It is evident that Daisy's words "I don't care" show that she is inconsiderate of other peoples' feelings. She rudely shows her affection for Gatsby in public without considering the fact that Nick and Myrtle are present. In addition to being inconsiderate of Nick and Jordan, Daisy is inconsiderate to Tom as well. "She looked at him [Tom] blindly. 'Why––how could I love him––possibly?'" (Fitzgerald 132) It is extremely inconsiderate to be telling Tom–– the man to whom she is married–– that she never loved him. Therefore, even though Tom showed carelessness through being inconsiderate of Daisy, Daisy was the more careless one because she was inconsiderate of more people as a result of her behaviour. These people include Nick, Jordan, and Tom. Finally, both Tom and Daisy show carelessness through being foolish. Tom Buchanan exhibits foolishness by physically harming Daisy. "We all looked. The knuckle was black and blue. 'You did it, Tom,' she said accusingly. 'I know you didn't mean to, but you did do it. That's what I get for marrying a brute of a man, a great, big, hulking physical specimen of a––'" (Fitzgerald 12) This is significant because since Tom was foolish by acting on impulse, Daisy got injured. Even though Daisy described that Tom did not ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6.
  • 7. Summary of The Great Gatsby and The How the Life of F... Nick Carraway, a young man from a comfortable background, moves from Minnesota to New York in order to pursue business. He rents a house in the West Egg district of Long Island, an area filled with the newly rich but considered unfashionable. Upon arriving, Nick visits his cousin Daisy Buchanan and her husband Tom whom he attended Yale with. The Buchanans live in the East Egg district, just across the harbor from West Egg and inhabited with those who come from wealthy families. While at his cousin's house, he meets a cynical woman named Jordan Baker and learns about his legendary neighbor, Mr. Gatsby. In addition, Nick learns that Tom is currently engaged in an extramarital affair with a woman named Myrtle Wilson. A couple days later, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In his nervousness, Gatsby begins acting arrogant and rude but as the afternoon progresses Nick aids Gatsby. By the time for departure, Daisy and Gatsby are very fond of each other and choose to continue the rendezvous at Gatsby's house. After a short period of time, Tom grows suspicious of the relationship between his wife and the man from West Egg. When Gatsby is invited to dine with Daisy and Tom, Gatsby passionately watches Daisy throughout the meal. Tom quickly notices and becomes furious, insisting that the party visit New York City. He takes them into the Plaza Hotel and begins fighting with Daisy and Gatsby, exclaiming that Gatsby is a criminal. After Nick calms Tom down and all tears subside, the group returns to their homes in West and East Egg, Daisy and Gatsby in one car while Nick, Jordan, and Tom return in another. On the way home, Nick, Jordan, and Tom come upon a violent wreck and soon discover that the woman who fell victim is Myrtle Wilson, Tom's lover. As details about the crash come forward, the group slowly realizes that Gatsby's car took her life. Myrtle's husband, George, becomes hysterical and decides that the driver of the car hit her on purpose and also had an affair with her. While wandering, searching for the car, he shows up at Tom's house prepared to kill. Tom tells George that it was Gatsby that hit Myrtle. Furious, George shows up at Gatsby's house to find Gatsby outside ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8.
  • 9. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald Lost and forgotten. These are the two qualities that F. Scott Fitzgerald and his novel The Great Gatsby had in common. That is, until college students resurrected the story in the 1940s after Fitzgerald's death. Born in St. Paul, Minnesota and eased into a life of mixed wealth and modest means, Fitzgerald developed a fascination with money and wealthy people. After his father lost his job, Fitzgerald vowed to never become a failure like his father. So, he wrote. He ended up going to Princeton University, where he partied excessively. He ended up meeting a love interest in Ginevra King, a girl who would alter the path of his life forever. Coming from a wealthy background, Ginevra was a tier above Fitzgerald. Her father eventually told Fitzgerald that, "Poor boys don't marry rich girls." The heartbroken Fitzgerald spiraled into a state of depression and flunked out of Princeton. After that, he had an obsessive desire to relive the past up until his early death at the age of 44. As with many highly acclaimed literary work, various film producers have tried to capture the spirit of the novel in a 90–minute or less motion picture. A daunting task, filmmakers struggle deciding which components of the novel are essential to the film, may it be scenarios, characters, or conversations. In 1974, movie director Jack Clayton produced his own adaptation of the novel. Then in 2013, Baz Luhrmann did the same. Many people debate which film is better, in respects to accuracy, appeal, and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 11. The American Work, The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald To many of us writing can be a daunting task, and often more complicated than it should be, but, as stated by famed American author Ernest Hemingway, "There is nothing to writing, All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed'. The fact of the matter is, eventually blood clots, and scabs form. It's the same in writing; many authors bleed onto a page and use their metaphorical blood as ink, thus placing a piece of themselves into their work. But, no matter how great the author, eventually writer block ensues, casting a writer into a literary funk and halting the flow of thematic ideas; however, themes such as love and wealth transcend time, culture, and language. So it's not difficult to think that famed authors, when in a pinch, often recycle broad themes to create a more compelling and relatable story. In the American work, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and its cinematic counterpart, directed by Baz Lutherman, themes such as wealth, love, isolation, and dissatisfaction are used to create a novel that still holds parallels to the world of today. The theme of wealth is prevalent in the works of the The Great Gatsby. The wealthy are portrayed as educated businessmen who have found a prosperous niche, often illegally. Persons with enough money are held in higher esteem than their middle class compatriots. In Gatsby's world money buys social acceptance, and it also grants living in the world without repercussions. In chapter four of The Great Gatsby, Gatsby, on his ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12.
  • 13. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald The classic novel, The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a story that uniquely captures the transformational period of the 1920's in America. It elegantly flows between conflicts of new money, young love, and care–free parties, illustrating the diverse issues of these influential times into captivating characters, all of whom gossip and live in the drama of the age. Most of the time, the drama is centered around money and wealthy people, because nearly every character in the book identifies people by their wealth rather than their personality. This materialistic view constantly creates conflict and tension between characters, which leads readers to see that people should be assessed based on their core qualities rather than their luxuries. However, in the 2013 film adaptation directed by Baz Luhrmann, this theme is obscured, particularly in the portrayal of the relationship between Daisy and Gatsby, and various cinematic techniques. From the novel to the film, the ironic conveyal of the theme of material wealth should not define a person's worth more than their character was lost, thus weakening the prominence of the theme throughout the film. The film obscures the theme of the novel in its use of symbol. In the novel, the symbol of shirts is prominent when after Gatsby reunites with Daisy and invites her over to his mansion on page 99, "he took out a pile of shirts and began throwing them, one by one before us, shirts of sheer linen and thick silk and fine flannel ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14.
  • 15. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald Great Gatsby Journal The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is written in the 1920 's during the prohibition, and the characters values and goals really shaped the theme. The book was written about how people lived and acted during the 1920 's. This paper will cover; how the values and goals of the characters were shaped by the values and goals of people in the 1920 's, how the values and goals of the characters shaped the setting of the novel, and lastly the overall theme of the novel. The values of the people in the 1920 's shaped the characters in the book The Great Gatsby. Some might ask how people in General could shape the characters of the book, well F. Scott Fitzgerald based the characters off people he observed in the 1920 's and even off his own lifestyle. His characters like Gatsby that throw parties for people all the time show the lifestyle of how people partied, and really didn 't care if alcohol was against the law. Even though Gatsby wasn 't the one doing the partying he still broke the laws of the 1920 's by having alcohol. Characters like Tom, and Myrtle broke the law of consuming alcohol enough for everybody. The author shows how much Tom drinks by including this sentence in the book, "Meanwhile Tom brought out a bottle of whiskey from a locked bureau door"(33). The quote states that Tom drinks alcohol and shows us that he already planned to have a gathering in advance. In the book, religion is never really mentioned, and this is ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16.
  • 17. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby The narrative point of view adopted by F. Scott Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby supports the novel's criticism of the upper class and the importance of wealth in society. Fitzgerald uses Nick Carraway as the narrator who views the upper class as entirely superficial. Through his observation of people at Gatsby's party, at the beginning of chapter three, Nick seems to feel that the wealthy are clones of a stereotype accepted and created by themselves. To him it seems as though this society is based on appearance and recognition and judges people according to how much they own rather than what they believe in. Nick's criticisms are accepted by the reader as impartial because Nick is the only major character who is not preoccupied with wealth. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... He says that his family have been 'prominent well–to–do people' for three generations and that they were hesitant in approving his decision to join the bond business in New York. He talks about having a dog, his old Dodge and a Finnish woman who helps him around the house and ends by saying that he had 'that familiar conviction that life was beginning over again with the summer.' At this point, by opening up to the reader, a close relationship has been established between the two which is set to last throughout the novel. Nick's opinions and criticisms are accepted by the reader as impartial which greatly influences the reader's interpretation of wealth and the wealthy. Nick is the only major character who is not preoccupied with money or power or belonging to a particular class. This sets him apart from the characters he and the reader are observing and allows him to be used as a measure for other characters. Nick further sets himself apart by being the only person who does not form relationships based on class and money. All around him, people are carefully choosing whom they will be 'friends' with based on how much money they have and if they belong to the right social class. When Nick first goes to Gatsby's party he feels 'uneasy' because he has never met his host however most of the people there were not even invited and they don't feel uneasy at all. By distancing himself from this corrupt upper class Nick comes across as the most honourable person there and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18.
  • 19. Views of Entitlement in the Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby as Fitzgerald's explanation of an American Reality which contradicts the American Dream That was always my experience–a poor boy in a rich town; a poor boy in a rich boy's school; a poor boy in a rich man's club at Princeton.... However, I have never been able to forgive the rich for being rich, and it has colored my entire life and works." –F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Life in Letters, ed. Matthew J. Bruccoli. New York: Scribners, 1994. pg. 352. The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, has been celebrated as one of the greatest – if not the greatest – American works of fiction. Of course, one could convincingly argue that Gatsby barely qualified as fiction, as it is the culmination of a trio of Fitzgerald's work that ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The culture of the wealthy Americans represented in The Great Gatsby was defined mainly by consumerism and excessive material wealth. Wherever given the opportunity, Jay Gatsby went over the top, as shown in his flamboyant style of dress and his huge mansion where he throws lavish parties. This is actually not all that different from Fitzgerald's life. After his first work was published to great fanfare, Fitzgerald was the talk of the town. As was the case with Gatzby, many of those around him did not – and never would – actually know Fitzgerald. They wished merely to be close to someone famous. Fitzgerald shunned all the attention, eventually moving to France. It was there that he looked at the supposed American Dream from a different perspective. To Fitzgerald, it was clear that the sudden wealth that many Americans began to acquire caused leisure and idleness to replace traditional ethics like hard work as qualities that were admired. (Decker, 28) Certainly the Buchanans and Gatsby cared little about hard work once they had achieved their material goals. Gatsby believed that in order to fulfill his own concept of the American Dream he needed to win Daisy's love, and to do that he would need to "establish himself as Somebody." Although he loves Daisy, he also sees her as more of a goal – a step toward the perfect life promised by the American Dream. In a way, Gatsby views Daisy much the way ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20.
  • 21. The Great Gatsby Character Analysis Francis Scott Fitzgerald, the author of a book widely renowned as the greatest American novel, is known for his tendency to insert autobiographical elements within his works of fiction. Within The Great Gatsby itself, Fitzgerald wrote scenes and storylines from his own corrupted and perverse experiences, ones brought about by his damaged psyche. The greatest examples of Fitzgerald's personal biography within The Great Gatsby are the amoral female characters which he wrote. Nevertheless the fact that the 1920s are widely regarded as the era in history when feminism first began to have a fighting chance, Fitzgerald wrote his female characters as destructive forces who are less than their male counterparts and have to be controlled. Fitzgerald's misogynistic opinions are present in Daisy, a woman villainized despite being under the control of others, Jordan, a corrupted girl who negatively represents the feminism of the jazz age, and Myrtle, a character who was written more like an animal than she was a woman. Drawing from his own negative experiences with women, including unhealthy obsessions with those out of his social league and an affair–ridden marriage with his wife, Fitzgerald branded his female characters within The Great Gatsby with practically irredeemable qualities, revealing his sexist ideals and intentions. Fitzgerald's second greatest inspiration for his female characters, following his wife Zelda, was Ginevra King, a debutante from Chicago with whom Fitzgerald shared loving correspondence with for many years. However, Fitzgerald's relationship with Ginevra ended upon her choosing of a wealthier suitor as her fiancé rather than the poor Fitzgerald, who had become infatuated with her by the time of the engagement (Noden np). The relationship ended in toxicity, with King claiming their letter–heavy relationship to be nothing more than flirtation and Fitzgerald starting "Which bitch do you think you are?" as a reply to King's wondering of which characters she inspired (Fitzgerald qtd. in Noden np). Fitzgerald's relationship dynamic with Ginevra is very much evident in the relationship between Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan, which tells the story of a poor soldier reinventing himself for a rich debutant ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22.
  • 23. F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald uses Nick in The Great Gatsby to develop a new view of the American dream by exploring the illusion of unending pleasure that it seems to provide. At first glance the American dream promised success and wealth that was almost limitless. An era characterized by extravagant parties and displays of wealth was built on an illusion that it would continue without end. Soon, people lost track of the work that got them there and began to be concerned more about the display of wealth than actually having it. This began to lead to an illusion of wealth built upon a materialistic view of society. The materialistic illusion began to be eroded upon despite attempts to stifle the advances of nature ("PROSPERITY"). This controversy ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This points to him as unreliable to narrate. He is not able to realize that Tom has not been suspected at first. Tom is an image of the materialistic man (Stratton). Nick's inability points to the depth that the illusion has permeated society. Nick's inability and lack of decisiveness fails to fill out a complete picture of what is happening around him. This uncertain narration emphasizes an uncertainty in what is actually happening and points to a distinction between reality and what is happening behind the scenes (Cartwright 3). This further reinforces the illusion that is the American dream. Nick contradicts himself by judging Gatsby's war story, comparing it with a simile to "skimming hastily through a dozen magazines" (Fitzgerald 66; ch. 4). Nick is judging a story where, "its subject is realistic, its detailing local and concrete, and the whole internally consistent," (Cartwright 6). This further develops Nick as unreliable as a narrator. Nick's unreliable narration helps to divulge the illusion that permeates the society around him. Nick is established as a balance between nature and materialism to emphasize the conflict that is hidden beneath the illusion of the American dream. Nick is able to see both the materialism and nature without bias. The light makes it seem as though, "my house was on fire" (Fitzgerald 81; ch. 5). By using a metaphor to compare the light from Gatsby's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24.
  • 25. The Great Gatsby Research Paper During the Roaring twenties, social class was an important aspect of society. All different classes were for the most part separated by where people lived. In other words, by no means would anyone from a lower class be caught in an uptown setting. There are a variety of characters in the novel that come from different economic backgrounds. In the novel, The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald successfully uses location to differentiate social status amongst his characters while the weather and seasons of those locations help guide them. Each character helps represent and support the differences of social class and the four main locations, The East Egg, the West Egg, the Valley of Ashes, and New York City. In The Great Gatsby ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... In addition Gatsby has also made his fortune through criminal activity, as he is willing to do anything to gain the social position he thinks necessary to win Daisy. The Valley of Ashes represents the socially unaccepted. The characters in the Valley of Ashes represent poverty. "This is the Valley of Dry Bones, the Waste Land, The dusty replica of modern society, where ash–grey men are crumbling, like Eliot's hollow men" (Bicknell 98). Myrtle and George Wilson both live in a run down garage in the Valley of Ashes. Myrtle Wilson tries desperately to improve her life and get out of the Valley of Ashes. The Valley of Ashes also represents doom and death. Myrtle is found as the victim of a hit and run caused by Daisy and Gatsby. The Valley of Ashes represents the death and dreams for Jay Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson, and George Wilson. These characters die in the novel due to misconception and anger. The characters go through the Valley of Ashes to get to New York City. New York City represents glitz and immorality. While in New York City Tom Buchanan has an affair with Myrtle Wilson. Myrtle Wilson doesn't care about anyone except those who will direct her on the correct path to improve her life. This is one of the reasons why she has an affair with Tom. Tom Buchanan has no moral doubts about his own extramarital affair with Myrtle but when it comes to other people such as Daisy and Gatsby he becomes outraged and forces a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26.
  • 27. Illusion and Reality in The Great Gatsby Essay Illusion and Reality in The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a novel about one man's disenchantment with the American dream. In the story we get a glimpse into the life of Jay Gatsby, a man who aspired to achieve a position among the American rich to win the heart of his true love, Daisy Fay. Gatsby's downfall was in the fact that he was unable to determine that concealed boundary between reality and illusion in his life. The Great Gatsby is a tightly structured, symbolically compressed novel whose predominant images and symbols reinforce the idea that Gatsby's dream exists on borrowed time. Fitzgerald perfectly understood the inadequacy of Gatsby's romantic view of wealth. At a young age ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Buchanans represent cowardice, corruption, and the demise of Gatsby's dream. Gatsby, unlike Fitzgerald himself, never discovers how he has been betrayed by the class he has idealized for so long. For Gatsby, the failure of the rich has disastrous consequences. Gatsby's desire to achieve his dream leads him to West Egg Island. He purchased a mansion across the bay from Daisy's home. There is a green light at the end of Daisy's dock that is visible at night from the windows and lawn of Gatsby's house. This green light is one of the central symbols of the novel. In chapter one, Nick observes Gatsby in the dark as he looks longingly across the bay with arms stretched outward toward the green light. It becomes apparent, as the story progresses that "the whole being of Gatsby exists only in relation to what the green light symbolizes This first sight, that we have of Gatsby, is a ritualistic tableau that literally contains the meaning of the completed book" (Bewley 41). A broader definition of the green light's significance is revealed in Chapter 5, as Gatsby and Daisy stand at one of the windows in his mansion. "If it wasn't for the mist we could see your home across the bay," said Gatsby. "You always have a green light that burns all night at the end of your dock." "Daisy put her arm through his abruptly, but he seemed absorbed in what he had just said. Possibly it had occurred to him that the colossal significance of that light had vanished ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28.
  • 29. Love and Wealth in the Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald... The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a novel about a rich socialite, Jay Gatsby, who tries to win back his love, Daisy Buchannan. Nick Caraway, Daisy's cousin, is the narrator who brings the reader through the time of the roaring twenties to tell the story of Jay Gatsby. The 1974 film of The Great Gatsby, directed by Jack Clayton, follows the detailed storyline closely by mirroring it, but also adds and takes away some aspects of the story. There are many comparisons that can be made as well as contrasts through the actor, scenery, music, and script choices for the film. The actor choices from the film compare to what the book envisioned, but also contrast. The character of Daisy is not similar in the film to what the book ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The scenery choices for the film matched up well to what was expected from the book, but some choices contrasted greatly. The Valley of Ashes was well portrayed in the film. The Valley is "...a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens..." (Fitzgerald 27). This shows that the Valley of Ashes is not a pleasant place to be in and is looked down upon. In the film, the interpretation on the Valley is spot on. It shows a dirty, sad little town, filled with depressed people. A second scenery choice that is well depicted in the film is the Buchannan's home. It is described to be very elegant and grand filled with beautiful furniture. Throughout the scenes in the Buchannan's house, the "grandness" is well represented through the furniture, landscaping and exterior chosen for the house. The exterior of Gatsby's house does not match up to its description in the book. "The one on my right was a colossal affair by any standard– it was a factual imitation of some Hotel de Ville in Normandy, with a tower on one side..." is how Gatsby's house is described (Fitzgerald 9). In the film, the house that is Gatsby's doesn't nearly stand up to what's pictured from the book. It is large, but is not as striking as described. Nick's house is also different from expected. In the film, Nick's house is rather large and nice in contrast to the "...small eye–sore..." as described in ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30.
  • 31. The Great Gatsby Report One of America's utmost renowned books happens to be The Great Gatsby, generally read by high school and college students, then again commonly misunderstood. This book subsisted during the Prohibition era which influenced Fitzgerald significantly in his writing. What numerous people fail to realize is the meaning that the book entails in addition to its resemblance to the author. The Great Gatsby exists as an extremely real and historical book that grasps the reader's attention and transports them to an incredibly real place amongst Fitzgerald's personal life, which society survives unknowledgeable of and deserves to reread and gain an enhanced understanding. F. Scotts Fitzgerald's birth took place on September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Identical to that of Jay Gatsby, he attended Oxford, a recognized academic school. In addition, Gatsby "only stayed five months. That's why [he] can't really call [himself] an Oxford man" (Fitzgerald 129) which closely parallels Scott's experience with Princeton, considering he never graduated. During Fitzgerald's time at Princeton he formed a romantic interest with a woman named Ginevra King. This woman can be described as being a beautiful, young debutant which Scott escorted to sundry amounts of parties and football games. One evening Scott was in Ginevra's hometown and overheard someone state that "poor boys shouldn't think of marrying rich girls" (Baughman and Bruccoli 17). She seemed to share the same opinion because by late 1916 Ginevra chose to pursue the attentions of wealthier young men. He attended Princeton in 1913, nonetheless by November 1917 he enlisted in the army and left the scholarly institution. From these details of Fitzgerald's life, it is safe for one to assume that he is portraying himself as Gatsby trying to steal away Daisy's heart, or in Fitzgerald's circumstance, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 32.
  • 33. F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby Douglass 1 Morgan Douglass Mrs. Fry 3B Color Symbolism in The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald is an author known for his best–selling book, The Great Gatsby. The story is about a man, Jay Gatsby, who was in love with Daisy Buchanan. Daisy was married to Tom, but Tom was cheating on her with Myrtle Wilson. There were two islands the story took place in: East Egg and West Egg. East Egg was the "old money," or money passed down from ancestors, while West Egg represented the "new money," or self– made money. Fitzgerald used multiple types of symbolism in his book, and his symbolism helped the reader understand the plot. The novel is read throughout schools to teach symbolism. The book can be described as "[...] satisfying as entertainment, thought provoking as a study, and increasingly rewarding the more closely it is examined." (Koster). A frequently used type of symbolism in The Great Gatsby was color. The colors symbolized in the book were white, green, yellow, blue, gold, and gray. The color white normally represents pureness or innocence. In The Great Gatsby, though, it represented a fake innocence. Daisy was always around white: white clothes, white curtains, and white rooms. Even her name was symbolized with white. A daisy flower has white petals and a yellow center. Daisy was not anywhere close to the picture of innocence; she was all about money and would try her hardest to get it. She married Tom Buchanan for the money, Douglass 2 even if she wasn't happy with him. ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 35. gattom Importance of the Automobile in The Great Gatsby... The Importance of the Automobile in The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby was written about a time of gaiety for a certain set of people. One of the major thematic aspects of the book is driving and the automobile. At the time the book was written the car had begun its establishment as a national institution. This is apparent in one of the central events in the book. Tom's unfaithfulness first comes to light from a car accident in Santa Barbara. He misguides the car and the misdirection of his life is made glaringly evident. The automobile affected Fitzgerald and it influenced the writing in The Great Gatsby. Driving is equated with living. Nick Carraway, describing their ill–fated trip from New York in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Tom is hulking and has a definitive presence, much like a large car or bus. Tom drives a station wagon, extremely utilitarian. In the end, Tom becomes Daisy's choice because, like a station wagon, he is large, solid and the easiest way to go. On the other hand Gatsby's car is described as "a rich cream color, bright with nickel, swollen here and there in its monstrous length with triumphant hatboxes and supper–boxes and tool–boxes, and terraces with a labyrinth of windshields that mirrored a dozen suns"(68). This description can be very accurately applied to Gatsby as well as his car. He is white, but does not resonate with the same WASP purity that the Buchanans do. Thus he can be construed as "cream" colored. He is very brightly rich but there is falseness to it, much like nickel instead of silver. He is "swollen here and there" with the rumors about who he is and where he is from. These rumors bolster his image and swell him up. He has many boxes, or occupations, and many different faces that line him and define him like the various boxes that define the car. The most accurate comparison of all is that of Gatsby and his car's labyrinth of windshields. The image this creates is a glass maze, apparently easy to see through but difficult to solve. He provides a mirror for the sun and happiness of everyone else, not only those at his parties, but Daisy as well. These mirrors and windshields take the attention away from him, and protect him from the revelation ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 37. The Defiance Of Gender Stereotypes Naomi Mash Mr. Cole Honors English III 15 October 14 The Defiance of Gender Stereotypes in Fitzgerald's, The Great Gatsby Throughout the 1920's, before Women's Suffrage, women were viewed as inferior, as well as subordinate to males because of many years of patriarchal dominance. In F. Scott Fitzgerald's, The Great Gatsby, women are seen as lesser by the male characters, yet show a great sense of power and domination over the actions and storyline. The major plotline of Gatsby's love for Daisy and the American Dream circulates around the mere factor of the power women have over men. Fitzgerald's portrayal of women parallels with the 1920's societal reflections on how men are viewed as dominant, whereas women are treated as second–class citizens. Daisy, Jordan and Myrtle are portrayed poorly through their insouciant view on the world, objectification by their male counterparts and their narcissism, but defy the stereotypes of the 1920's. In The Great Gatsby, the characters, male or female, let their narcissism control their actions and get the best of them. Daisy is shown to care more about herself than her daughter, flaunting off the child as an object of, not pride, but a reflection of herself. Daisy remarks, " All right...I 'm glad it 's a girl. And I hope she 'll be a fool –– that 's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool" (Fitzgerald 21), showing that she is aware of her own narcissism and marginalization, yet how she chooses to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38.
  • 39. F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby Jay Gatsby and F. Scott Fitzgerald F. Scott Fitzgerald is an acclaimed American author, popularly recognized for his novel The Great Gatsby. In addition to his literary work, Fitzgerald is noted for his unstable personal life. Originally coming from a low–income background, he could not marry the woman that he first loved. Even when he met another woman, he had to acquire wealth to marry her; this drove him to publish his first novel. He married her shortly after. However, a couple years after, he turned to alcohol and his wife had a mental breakdown. Fitzgerald had to constantly work to pay for his wife's medications. Not having close friends to whom he could express his life struggles, Fitzgerald conveyed his difficulties through his writing. In the novel The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald used the character Jay Gatsby to mirror his own life. Fitzgerald enrolled in the military for a short period of time, according to Matthew Bruccoli in "Some Sort of Epic Grandeur". He writes, "...he enlisted in the army as a second lieutenant" (1). Likewise, Jay Gatsby decided to join the military for some time. Fitzgerald and Gatsby not only share similar job experiences, they also share corresponding backgrounds. F. Scott Fitzgerald, like Jay Gatsby, originates from a destitute environment. Fitzgerald's family was excluded from elite society. Gatsby coincidentally grows up under similar circumstances. He was born and raised on a farm in North Dakota. F. Scott Fitzgerald writes in the The ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40.
  • 41. F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby Essay Man dreams of living the life of the elite social class and of the power and admiration inherent within. F. Scott Fitzgerald comes to terms with this American dream in The Great Gatsby, a novel about social life in the 1920's. The social hierarchy of the times plays a very important role in this novel. Here Fitzgerald illustrates three specific social classes: old money, new money, and lower class, with old money and new money taking center stage. Gatsby himself personifies new money; he made himself into a rich man through shady dealings. Tom Buchanan, on the other hand, represents old money. He received everything he has on a silver platter. He earned nothing but his inheritance. At the time, it was extremely desirable to be old money, ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Tom refuses because marrying into a lower social class would develop into even more of a scandal than having a mistress. This corrupted American dream prevents Tom from openly allowing Myrtle into his life. Old money's highly discriminating nature allows its members to attain superiority, while this self–serving superiority further enhances their American dream. The attempts of new money to imitate old money remain futile. For example, although Daisy truly loves Gatsby, he represents new money. Despite his attempts to become old money, the old rich have never embraced him. Daisy cannot be with him because he is not and never will be of her class. Gatsby even offers to take the blame for a murder she committed, yet she will nott even leave her husband for him. "'Was Daisy driving?' 'Yes,' he said after a moment. 'but of course I'll say I was.'" (p. 151). Daisy allows Gatsby to take the blame for her without showing either remorse or gratitude. In this way, Fitzgerald shows that although old money people count themselves rich monetarily, they show a lack of morality and accountability. Daisy's carelessness and irresponsibility cause her to need others to clean up after her without caring who takes the fall. Old money's arrogance and haughtiness make their misguided American dream more of an American nightmare. The elite created the American dream in order to make themselves and others think they are superior. They are not, in fact, above all others, but have ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 43. Biographical Effects Of The Great Gatsby Biographical effects in The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald lived during the Jazz age, much like his own experiences, Gatsby encountered ambitions, challenges and desires. Through the use of important events in his own life, F. Scott Fitzgerald reflects his own ambitions such as a trying to find meaning in life Overcoming challenges that arose with the Jazz age, such as the introduction of liquor, leading to addiction. And desires, including romances and fortune, through the main character in his novel, The Great Gatsby. Throughout F. Scott Fitzgerald's life, he struggled to find meaning. He eventually dropped out of Princeton as he was failing many of his classes, which made him enlist in WW1. Unfortunately he was unable to achieve anything great while fighting overseas. In his novel, the character Jay Gatsby is an accomplished war hero who even received awards for his bravery. contrast from Scott Fitzgerald, and represents his yearning for achievement during the war, as Jay Gatsby reminisces with Nick, he flaunts his war achievements, '"I was promoted to be a major, and every major allied government gave me a decoration–even montenegro... that's the one from Montenegro. 'Major Jay Gatsby' I read, 'For Valour Extraordinary.'"(35) Gatsby clearly holds impressive titles, however Scott Fitzgerald possessed little opportunity for anything even remotely as impressive. Jay Gatsby was given the opportunity to study at Oxford University after the war, in contrast to Scott Fitzgerald who dropped out of Princeton University to fight in the war, to no avail. "It was an opportunity they gave to some of the officers after the Armistice," he continued. "We could go to any of the universities in England or France."(71) Scott Fitzgerald's ambition for achievement through war or education are reflected through Jay Gatsby. Scott Fitzgerald lived during the time of the Jazz age, one of the U.S.A's rowdiest time periods. As a result, he got into some bad habits, including heavy drinking which would eventually become a major factor in the deterioration of his health, this was also during the 20's when alcohol was illegal and was obtained ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 45. Symbols and Symbolism in The Great Gatsby Essay Symbolism in The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby has more relevance in today's society than it did when it was written. With the recent societal trend that emphasizes lack of morals and material wealth over a meaningful existence, Fitzgerald's message really hits home. Which is more important – money or love? Social status or being true to oneself? Fitzgerald uses metaphor and symbols to great effect in order to illustrate what can happen when the pursuit of happiness becomes warped (by American ideals) into the pursuit of money. One of the major symbols in the novel is the color green. Green represents the hopes and dreams of people striving to accomplish the American dream of wealth and glory. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The valley of ashes represents the byproduct of a nation obsessed with money. It is filled with the gray industrial ashes of the factories that helped to catapult dreamers to the top of the world. It also symbolizes the lower class. The people living in the towns nearby are described as gray and solemn. They are washed up because they were unable to accomplish their goals and fulfill the American dream. Wilson, for example, is described as someone with "an ashen, dust veiled suit" and "pale hair." The ash heap is described as a place "where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills." As those ashes pile up, they bury the hopes of people seeking the American dream. The towns of East and West Egg are also symbolic. The people of East Egg represent those who already have wealth from inheritance. The people of West Egg represent those people who have gained their wealth through hard work and business. Gatsby has lots of money but he will always be "subtly incompatible" with the affluent society of East Egg. East Egg also represents old money and the east coast, whereas West Egg represents new money and the west coast. Throughout the novel, characters openly rebuke the west. For example, early in the novel Nick says, "Oh, I'll stay in the East, don't you worry." The weather is another symbol that is used primarily for the purpose of setting the general mood of the book. Moments of death ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 47. What Does Daisy Symbolize The Lost Person In The Great Gatsby Scott Fitzgerald, the author of The Great Gatsby, was an intellectual and miserable person. His family was affluent but became decadent in his generation. As a man who was interested in literature, Fitzgerald always fail in the university exams because he spent most time on writing. He fell in love with a girl called Ginevra King. However, King's family was wealthy, and her father against the relationship between King and Fitzgerald. In fact, King's father told Fitzgerald that a poor guy would never marry a rich girl. Later, Fitzgerald joined the army and prepared for the World War I. Nevertheless, the war ended before he went to the battlefield. After the war, Fitzgerald fell in love again with a girl. Unfortunately, the girl refused to be ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... From my point of view, Daisy symbolizes the lost generation because she was confused about the goal of life, did not have a strong stand, and was extremely materialistic. Besides, Daisy was sophisticated and good at tricking others. She promised Gatsby that she would wait for him before he joined the army. To Gatsby, Daisy was paragon of perfection. I think Daisy represents the women who are untruthful and ruthless. They attract men and tried to make benefit from those men. As an idiom says, "people who fall in love are blind" in other words, those females are conspirators because they make those men totally believe them and they deceive the males. As a result, those men become scapegoats and they do not realize that they were used by those malicious women. In fact, Daisy was a typical example of this kind of women. Her charming and fancy backgrounds made Gatsby lost his intellect and willing to do all things for her. Gatsby became the killer of Myrtle Wilson though he clearly knew that Daisy was the murder. What is more, Daisy viewed Gatsby completely as a tool. In fact, instead of attending Gatsby's funnel, Daisy chose to leave with Tom by leaving no address. Therefore, Fitzgerald depicted Daisy as a representative of the worldly and fickle ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 48.
  • 49. An Autobiographical Portrayal of F. Scott Fitzgerald as... Frances Scott Key Fitzgerald, born September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota, is seen today as one of the true great American novelists. Although he lived a life filled with alcoholism, despair, and lost–love, he managed to create the ultimate love story and seemed to pinpoint the ¡§American Dream¡¨ in his classic novel, The Great Gatsby. In the novel, Jay Gatsby is the epitome of the ¡§self–made man,¡¨ in which he dictates his entire life to climbing the social ladder in order to gain wealth, to ultimately win the love of a woman: something that proves to be unattainable. As it turns out, Gatsby¡¦s excessive extravagance and love of money, mixed with his obsession for a woman¡¦s love, is actually the autobiographical portrayal of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Although heartbroken at the time, Fitzgerald answered Yeats¡¦ crucial question–– ¡§Does the imagination dwell the most / Upon a woman lost or a woman won?¡¨ –– by using his lost love as imaginative inspiration. For in his 1925 masterpiece, The Great Gatsby, he recreated the elusive, unattainable Ginevra as the beautiful and elegant Daisy Fay Buchanan. Throughout the novel, Fitzgerald described Daisy as an almost disembodied voice which, Gatsby realized at the end, was ¡§full of money.¡¨ Fitzgerald wrote, ¡§her face was sad and lovely with bright things in it, bright eyes and a bright passionate mouth, but there was an excitement in her voice that men who had cared for her found difficult to forget¡¨ (Fitzgerald, 14). It should be noted that, ¡§Gatsby¡¦s ability, like Fitzgerald¡¦s, ¡¥to keep that illusion perfect¡¦ sustains his self–deceptive and ultimately self–destructive quest, with the help of his own fabulous money, to win Daisy back from her husband¡¨ (Meyers, 30). Although Ginevra King was Fitzgerald¡¦s first true love, she certainly was not his last. In July 1918, while stationed in Montgomery, Alabama with the military, Scott met a gracious, soft–voiced girl named Zelda Sayre at a country club dance. Scott recalled that night that, ¡§she let her long hair hang down loose and wore a frilly dress that made her look younger than eighteen. She came from a prominent though not wealthy family and had just graduated ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 51. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald The famously written book, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, provides many details, which help to provoke the meaning behind this narrative. The use of symbolic objects helps to connect the significance of the story on a deeper level and eventually reveal its literal meaning. Many symbols portrayed throughout The Great Gatsby, such as the green light, the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg, Gatsby's Mansion and the weather help to uncover one of the main themes–the American Dream. First, the green light located at the end of Tom and Daisy Buchanan's dock, in East egg, plays a considerable role in Gatsby's life. In chapter 1, we first encounter Gatsby's attraction with the green light. When Nick Carraway sees Gatsby for the first time, he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The color green maintains a more promising effect as opposed to the color red or yellow, therefore giving Gatsby hopefulness for the future. This color also signifies Gatsby's main objective in life– money. With money come ambition and jealousy, which also implies societies appeal and the superficial hopelessness of achieving the common theme of the American Dream. Second, perhaps one of the most well known symbols of this book, as well as in literature, are the eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg. The billboard, overlooking the Valley of Ashes, is up to promote the business of an eye doctor (Dr. T.J. Eckleburg). The eyes, which make up the advertisement, watch over the main characters as they pass underneath on their way into New York City. These eyes observe as Tom carries on his disloyal affair, as Gatsby drives Nick into town to meet Meyer Wolfshiem (man who fixed the world series), and also these eyes observe the yellow car and the individual who ran over and killed Myrtle Wilson. In chapter 8, Wilson affiliates Eckleburg's eyes to the eyes of God. After discovering Myrtles affair with Tom Buchanan, Wilson articulates to Myrtle: "God knows what you've been doing, everything you've been doing. You may fool me, but you can't fool God!" (Fitzgerald 159). This indicates how strongly Wilson feels about the "eyes" and the correlation between God's judgment and Myrtle's affair. Adultery is seen as a sin ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 52.
  • 53. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald Aiswariya Ramaswamy Mrs. Orrick ELA 11, Hour 4 12 December 2014 Happiness is the Key to Success The concept of success is commonly misinterpreted by society solely as the achievement of certain materialistic goals. In literature, this idea is disproved through the in–depth analysis of a character's emotional turmoil and internal conflicts in contrast to their success in social and economical aspects. F. Scott Fitzgerald, in his novel The Great Gatsby, reveals that true success involves two levels: worldly possessions and emotional nirvana. Jay Gatsby serves to epitomize Fitzgerald's view on how monetary success does not always lead to the attainment of one's ultimate goal of satisfaction and euphoria. Gatsby has all the wealth and influence a man could wish for, yet he is chronically isolated and delusional when it comes to the aspect of love and claims that "[He] will fix everything it just the way it was before... She'll [Daisy] see" (Fitzgerald, 110). This statement proves that Gatsby's ultimate goal was not to increase his net worth, but to use the money in order to lure Daisy back into his life and attain emotional exuberance. As time progresses in the novel, it is apparent that Gatsby's unhealthy desire for Daisy increases even as his wealth proliferates, and his fiscal success only seems to create further agitation. In the novel, Gatsby's lavish parties make him the talk of the town, and he is envied by society since their view of success is solely financial. This ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 55. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald According to the newspaper company The Telegraph, daisies can become "serious weeds" and have the ability "thrive in generally inhospitable conditions." This informative description of a common daisy mirrors F. Scott Fitzgerald's character, Daisy Buchanan. In his novel, The Great Gatsby, Daisy tries to preserve the stability of her wealthy lifestyle through her marriage with Tom Buchanan instead of pursuing true love with Gatsby. Daisy becomes monotonous and dependent on wealth to act as an equilibrator of her life. Her dependency becomes uncontrollable, and that like that beautiful, innocent flower, she becomes a vile weed rooted in corruption. Fitzgerald implements Daisy as a way to convey the innate destructive property of wealth; it ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Already, the effects of wealth is immediately taking place, almost an instantaneous reaction. She prioritizes her ambitions over the possibility of finding true love. However, after meeting the new Gatsby, she is attracted to his material wealth: "He [takes] out a pile of shirts and [begins] throwing them, one by one before us, shirts of sheer linen and thick silk and fine flannel...While we admired he brought more and the soft rich heap mounted higher" (92). The shirts are symbolic of Gatsby's heaping wealth and as the "heap mounted higher," she continues to be amazed by the immense and accumulating amount, and beauty of the shirts. The tempting diction of "soft" and "rich" appeals greatly to Daisy because she desires a cushion, security, in order to maintain her wealth. Gatsby intentionally flaunts the extravagant display of wealth through his shirts in order to make himself more appealing to Daisy, by assuring her of his wealth that can support her. However, Daisy did not choose Gatsby because of the unpredictability concerning his future. In Daisy's youth, "her artificial world was redolent of orchids and pleasant, cheerful snobbery and orchestras which set the rhythm of the year, summing up the sadness and suggestive of life in new tunes" (151). The label of Daisy's world as "artificial" reveals the bridging partnership between privileges and pretension, that along with privilege is the burden of pretension and "sadness." In order ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 56.
  • 57. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald Flappers, innovation, invention, prosperity, cars, industrialization, the Jazz Age. These are all words that come to mind when one thinks of the 1920's in America. Many people believe it was a great time in American history, however these individuals are only seeing one side of the story. Yes, the 1920's were a time of growth in some area's of society, and were portrayed as a time that allowed people to be free and be themselves, a time where people could finally let loose. However, this could not be further from the truth. People lived in slums, multiple families packed into tiny houses, discrimination thrived, diseases spread uncontrollably. Those who were fortunate enough to avoid these problems because they were wealthy had to deal ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... While the majority of the characters in The Great Gatsby are wealthy, upper class individuals, Fitzgerald does not fail to display the living conditions of those less fortunate. He does this through the Valley of Ashes, a place Nick describes as "...a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens... gray land and the spasms of bleak dust.."(Fitzgerald 23). Nick continues to use the words gray and crumbling throughout the rest of the story to symbolize the dismal lives people who lived there led, as opposed to the rich, colorful lives the upper class enjoyed. As the book progresses, the reader learns more and more about the stark differences between the gray Valley of Ashes and the sparkling world of East and West Egg, yet most of the wealthy characters never even acknowledge that the place exists. Instead, they continued their lives of opulent wealth, while many families were struggling to survive. Besides the characters in Gatsby, real groups of people faced adversity that went somewhat unnoticed. One of these groups was the African Americans living during this time. One person who illustrated the challenges African Americans faced was Harlem Renaissance poet Langston Hughes. Through his poem "Refugee in America" he was able to show how African Americans were free of ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 58.
  • 59. Nick Carraway as Honest Liar in Fitzgerald's The Great... Nick Carraway as Honest Liar in Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby "Everyone suspects himself of at least one of the cardinal virtues, and this is mine: I am one of the few honest people that I have ever known" (Fitzgerald Gatsby 64). So writes Nick Carraway in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, characterizing himself in opposition to the great masses of humanity as a perfectly honest man. The honesty that Nick attributes to himself must be a nearly perfect one, by dint of both its rarity and its "cardinal" nature; Nick asserts for himself that he is among the most honest people he has ever encountered. Events in the book, however, do not bear this self–characterization out; far from being among the most honest people in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The discussion immediately preceding the characterization is most pressing on an interpretation of this self–characterization, as it provides a clear example of Nick's dishonesty just moments before he claims to be perfectly honest. Nick says of Jordan Baker, "Her grey sun–strained eyes stared straight ahead, but she had deliberately shifted our relations, and for a moment I thought I loved her" (63). But, however, before he could actively pursue Miss Baker, he acknowledges, there was one little matter he had to deal with: But I am slow thinking and full of interior rules that act as brakes on my desires, and I knew that first I had to get myself out of that tangle back home. I'd been writing letters once a week and signing them 'Love, Nick'...Nevertheless there was a vague understanding that had to be tactfully broken off before I was free. (64) Immediately preceding his statement about being one of the few honest people he has ever known, he admits to both falsely proclaiming his love and perpetuating a "vague understanding" he had no intention of fulfilling. What's more, Nick takes his long–belated decision to now, finally, deal with the situation as evidence of his perfect honesty–ignoring entirely the preceding weeks and months of deception! This matter of the "girl back home" warrants further study. This is the girl whom Daisy and Tom ask about, and the subject of whom Nick clearly (and ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 60.
  • 61. Comparing the Great Gatsby and American Beauty Set in the summer of the Roaring Twenties, The Great Gatsby follows the hedonistic and destructive lifestyles of the upper social classes of post–war America. This novel, written by F Scott Fitzgerald in the same time period, criticizes the shallowness of the actions of this outlandish generation and their eventual disillusionment with their society. American Beauty, the 1999 film directed by Sam Mendes and written by Alan ball, uses the setting of contemporary middle–class suburban America to examine the differences between the inner and outer realities of a "typical" American Beauty are obvious in connection between Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby and Mendes' American Beauty are obvious in the themes, plots and the actions of the ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The colossal dream that Gatsby builds up and holds onto eventually becomes his downfall and is the most prominent illustration of the failure of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby. Although it is the repercussions of their deceptive fantasies that Gatsby and Lester fall victim to, it was their continued search for love that leads them to these. Love is the principal value in The Great Gatsby and is illustrated best by the contrast of Gatsby's idealized romantic love for Daisy with Daisy's "love" for wealth and status, a love which is common to the majority of their irresponsible society. F Scott Fitzgerald emphasizes Gatsby's "romantic readiness" through this contrast as well as Gatsby's fall from grace that results in him becoming lost in "the colossal vitality of his illusions" (pg. 92). Daisy characterizes the power of a love of money in the Great Gatsby and is used by Fitzgerald in condemning Gatsby's hedonistic society as well as his own. However it is the absence of love –rather than the presence– that is most prominent in American ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 62.
  • 63. The Great Gatsby American Dream Failure Essay The Great Gatsby is a 1925 novel that was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The American Dream is the main theme of this novel; this is what Gatsby's life depends on. The underlying cause for everything that happens in the novel is an idea, an idea towards which everyone strives and dreams of. This unattainable, destructive, and hindrance dream, as Fitzgerald calls it, is the American Dream. What exactly is The American Dream some might ask? Well this dream could change from person to person, but through Fitzgerald's character we see that is of wealth, success, and generally a high position in society. Fitzgerald shows us as the reader, that this dream is unattainable by the way that Gatsby's dream dies due to Daisy. From these two characters Fitzgerald shows a failure in accomplishing this dream. In the novel ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Fitzgerald makes a big point that the American Dream is nothing, but an obstacle in people's future. The American Dream is like the green light; when people want it they stay focused on that one thing, and will do anything to have it. Often times though people lose sight of reality and forget about others around them or just lose feeling all together. When you have lost the sight of reality there is no future that is ahead of you so there really is no place to go. The American Dream is an imaginary dream that prevents people from living there life the way they should and having a future. Once that dream is gone or the green light fades that person has nothing to live for, just like Gatsby. Gatsby's life was over as soon as Daisy left; he had nothing to look forward to or even live for. His life revolved around the American Dream. He was always living in the yesterday and no the today as Fitzgerald said "So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past" (Fitzgerald 180). No matter how hard we try we are always going to be brought back to where we ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 64.
  • 65. Essay on Symbols of The Great Gatsby The 1920s were a time of big dreams, moral decline, and hardships in America . The Roaring Twenties were a different time altogether with its bootleggers and speakeasies, women becoming more independent, the poor becoming poorer, but through all this was The American Dream keeping the hope afloat. F. Scott Fitzgerald captured this era in his book, The Great Gatsby. Through his many symbols he illustrates the hopes, the forgotten God, and the oppressed Americans of the Twenties. The symbols in The Great Gatsby help convey several different themes, from wealth to loss of morals, to poverty. The green light in The Great Gatsby is an ambiguous symbol. The green light is deceiving at first, tricking the reader into thinking it is ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... " (Fitzgerald 98). The green light then changes its meaning to despair for now it is but a dream, a wistful, hopeless dream. Once Gatsby's dream is within reach, his usual parties and extravagances are changed. "Each step towards the green light, however, shadows some part of Gatsby's grandiose achievement. With Daisy's disapproval the spectroscopic parties cease. To preserve her reputation Gatsby empties his mansion of lights and servants. And finally only darkness and ghostly memories tenant the deserted house" (Koster 37). The green light for Gatsby was a five year dream. The light is Daisy and hope for the future; however, the green light remains forever across the bay from him, just out of reach. God seems to be just out of reach as well. God is portrayed as a billboard that watches over the immoral occurrences of the valley of ashes. He is nothing more than a pair of eyes put there for business purposes and then forgotten. God was put on the back burner in the 1920s , while social lives and personal wants were brought to the front burner. "But above the grey land and the spasms of bleak dust which drift endlessly over it, you perceive, after a moment, the eyes of Doctor T.J. Eckleburg...Evidently some wild wag of an oculist set them there to fatten his practice in the borough of Queens and then sank down himself into eternal blindness or forgot them and moved away ." (Fitzgerald 27) God has been belittled to nothing more than an ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 67. The American Dream Is Hard to Achieve in the Great Gatsby... The American Dream is hard to achieve The Great Gatsby", written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrays a world filled with rich societal activities, love affairs, and dishonesty. Nick Carraway is the busy narrator of the book, a curious choice considering that he is in a different class and almost in a different world than Gatsby and the other characters. Nick relates the plot of the story to the reader as a part of Gatsby's circle. He has hesitant feelings towards Gatsby, despising his personality and corrupted dream but feeling drawn to Gatsby's wonderful ability to hope. Using Nick as an honorable guide, Fitzgerald attempts to guide readers on a journey through the novel to show the corruption and failure of the American Dream. To achieve ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 101). Gatsby is disappointed that the woman he loves is not really who he wants her to be. Gatsby wants a better life and he thinks he can do it if he puts his mind to it, which is also a part of the American Dream. Nonetheless, Gatsby's dream collapses when he fails to win Daisy and is not accepted by the upper class. All his money cannot help him when old man Wilson fires a gun at him. Gatsby sees himself as a failure when Daisy chooses Tom instead of him. The failure of Gatsby's hoped for life relates to the failure of the American Dream. Without his dream Gatsby has nothing, nothing to keep him going, no direction, and no purpose to live. Myrtle, who represents the low and ignorant class of America, tried to break the social barriers and thus pursues wealth by any means necessary. Using her sexuality and crude appearance, she becomes false for abandoning and dismissing her own social foundation, and like Nick, we as readers are disgusted by her monstrous approach to entering the rich class. At one point, and quite humorously to the knowing onlooker, Myrtle complains about a service done for her that was so expensive. Obviously misusing her wording, it is comical only because she is trying so hard to fit into the stuck–up upper class personality, and failing miserably. Her rudeness becomes more ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 69. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald Parties, flappers, jazz, alcohol, and change are all ways to define the boisterous, extravagant era known today as the Roaring Twenties. Women especially set the stage for transforming society, as they broke tradition and advanced into the world. They earned money for themselves, became independent, and were able to voice their opinion with the freedom to vote. F. Scott Fitzgerald emphasizes the emerging woman and her willingness to break free from social standards and create her own customs in The Great Gatsby. Daisy, a submissive woman, relies on her husband Tom's money to provide happiness, yet rebels and has an affair with her true love, Jay Gatsby. Jordan Baker mirrors the pretentious and irresponsible flapper personality and challenges gender roles by pursuing a career in golf. Lastly, Myrtle Wilson, an outsider, participates in an affair with Tom Buchanan, yet falls into his trap of violence. All three of these women imitate similar personalities of women in Fitzgerald 's own life. Daisy mirrors Fitzgerald's unrealistic dream, Ginevra King, and his wife, Zelda, while Jordan resembles Fitzgerald's friend, Edith Cummings, as they both pursued the career of golf and propelled themselves into society as independent women. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald emphasizes the contrast between the expectations of women's behaviors before and during the 1920s, while focusing on the emergence of the "new woman" and the new freedoms of women in relation to the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 71. Symbolism in the Great Gatsby Symbolism in The Great Gatsby In the novel The Great Gatsby by Francis Scott Fitzgerald there are many different kinds of symbols used. Fitzgerald uses colors and material luxuries as the two main symbols in the novel. The author uses these symbols most frequently in the novel. The symbolism is carefully incorporated within the novel which makes it hard to detect at first glance. Within these symbols Fitzgerald mainly expresses feelings and the American Dream. Fitzgerald uses colors like an artist in his novel. Each color represents a different feeling or has a different meaning. He uses the color yellow to symbolize moral decay and death, the color white to symbolize innocence, and the color green to express hope. Fitzgerald's use of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... When Gatsby returned to pursue his dream, he knew that Daisy is married Tom. He desperately wanted to get back together with her so much that he bought a house where he could see Daisy's house from his. Gatsby was able to pick out a green light at the end of her dock, and often looked toward it. That green symbolized as Gatsby's deepest feeling and goal in this book. Gatsby was so close to his goal of being with Daisy; however, the hard work that he put into his life to get where he was to achieve his goal unfortunately was not enough because his life had ended. "Another symbolization the color green has in this novel is an urge to strive ahead in life, to do better in life and succeed. Gatsby changes his entire persona for a better, more sociable, image and status. He is constantly striving to be a more successful figure in society" (Schneider 14). Ever since Gatsby was a boy he put himself on a schedule with hopes for becoming a successful, highly respected, and well–known person. "He knew he had a big future in front of him. (Fitzgerald 181)," his dad says about Gatsby. "Jimmy was bound to get ahead. He always had some resolves like this..." (Fitzgerald 182). White is the other color that is used as a symbol in this novel. Where green only influenced one character particularly Gatsby, white has a wider range of influence on the characters. This color symbolizes one thing, innocence, but it appears in every ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 73. Affairs, Nick, and Gatsby in Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby Nick is the narrative reader in The Great Gatsby. Gatz was a poor person that changes his name to Gatsby. Tom was a cheater and was unfaithful to Daisy. Daisy was a flirt and rich. Myrtle is a poor women that lived over her and her husband's garage shop. Myrtle would let Tom push her around because he was a rich man that would let Myrtle forget that she was poor. "She never loved you, do you hear he cried. She only married you because I was poor and she was tired of waiting for me (Fitzgerald 139)". Tom is married to Daisy (Lisca). Even though daisy is marring Tom, Daisy has feeling for Gatsby (Lisca). Tom and Daisy relationship is wrong because they are married. People may say that Tom and Daisy does not love each other. When it was ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Nick does not think Tom and Myrtle really loves each other (Hays, "Fitzgerald"). Everyone knew about Tom's affair with Myrtle expect Myrtle's husband. Nick left Tom and Myrtle at his house when he went to the store. Nick buys some cigarettes and finds Tom and Myrtle in his bedroom (Hays, "Fitzgerald"). Daisy accidently ran Myrtle over in Gatsby's car, and Myrtle died (Hays, "Oxymoron"). Wilson walks to Gatsby's estate, kills him and then kills himself ("Great"... Fitzgerald). Daisy was the one that took Gatsby's car without knowing and was Myrtle and Daisy hit and kills Myrtle at the scene of the crime. ("Great"... Fitzgerald). When Myrtle died, Gatsby saying how he feels about Daisy (Farrant). The reason why Gatsby paid for the mansion is that she would be across the water (Fitzgerald 85). Gatsby continued getting closer to Daisy (Fitzgerald 84). Gatsby had asked Daisy for a Dance at a party (Fitzgerald 113). When Tom left the room Daisy, took a chance and walked over to Gatsby was pulled closer to Daisy so she could kiss him on the mouth (Fitzgerald 123). Daisy wants to go in town with Gatsby but Tom over heard and he said he wanted to go (Fitzgerald 127). When Tom walked over to Daisy and Gatsby were staring at each other (Fitzgerald 127). James Gatz was Jay Gatsby legal name when James lived North Dakota (Fitzgerald 104). James lived in a boathouse instead of a regular house (Fitzgerald 104) James is a poor man that changes his name ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 75. The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald Karen Morgan Ms. McGowan English 11A, Period 4 9 January 2014 The Great Gatsby Individuals who approach life with an optimistic mindset generally have their goals established as their main priority. Driven by ambition, they are determined to fulfill their desires; without reluctance. These strong–minded individuals refuse to be influenced by negative reinforcements, and rely on hope in order to achieve their dreams. As a man of persistence, the wealthy Jay Gatsby continuously strives to reclaim the love of his life, Daisy Buchanan. Throughout the novel The Great Gatsby, Jay makes a substantial amount of effort to impress, and persuade Daisy to be reacquainted once again. Providing that, F. Scott Fitzgerald associates Daisy as Gatsby's green light. Fitzgerald represents the green light in Gatsby's life as a significant role to The Great Gatsby. In the novel The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby's green light symbolizes his undying passion for an idealistic goal that he aspires to accomplish; his green light indicates how he uses his wealth in order to acquire his desire, it also represents his American Dream. Even after five years without Daisy beside him, Jay Gatsby is still willing to pursue his green light; in spite of his love for her. Time and time again, Gatsby repeatedly insists that he will recreate the past with Daisy and always states he will, "Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us" (Fitzgerald 189). Until the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
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  • 77. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby: A Life Foolishly Lived Released in 1925, F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby cleverly demonstrates the manners and morals commonly practiced throughout the time period. The plot revolves around several main themes and effectively expresses Fitzgerald's unique perspective. With an objective standpoint, Nick Carraway narrates the story as Jay Gatsby, a foolish racketeer, tries to win over his lifelong love, Daisy Buchanan. Although pecuniary matters can often be too large of an influence on human relationships, the novel unveils several powerful battles entangling love, morals, and money. As Nick Carraway follows the tale of Jay Gatsby pursuing a dream, Gatsby can be observed as a foolish ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Transforming his name and developing new life values are only parts of the lifecycle in which Jay Gatsby participates in order to follow his dreams. Although not always successful in creating new individualities, Gatsby's attempts are fully genuine. Gatsby struggles to fit into social groups in to which Daisy Buchanan belongs. Daisy and her husband, Tom Buchanan, often attend parties hosted by Gatsby. Although these parties may be essentially hosted by him, Gatsby does not wholeheartedly attend. As he shrinks away to other areas of his home, Gatsby is able to avoid socializing with his guests. "I made an attempt to find my host but the two or three people of whom I asked his whereabouts stared at me in such an amazed way and denied so vehemently any knowledge of his movement" (46). This quote demonstrates how many of the partygoers have become used to Gatsby's nonattendance. Therefore, the primary motive of his characteristic social gatherings is revealed, to attract the attention and win the heart of Daisy Buchanan. Although Gatsby believes his parties may be bringing him somewhat closer to his love, they further extend the gap between him and other social groups. At many parties, guests often speak of him and his fictitious past with little concern of his reputation. For example, one guest at a party speaks of "...he was a German spy during the war" (48) and another speaks of him saying, "I'll bet he killed a man" (48), while others ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...