The movie “The Great Gatsby” shows life in the 1920s, but there are some inaccuracies between characteristics of the time period and the movie. Despite these inaccuracies, most of the movie stays true to the time period. It accurately shows the imbalance of power during that time. Although the United States was industrializing, only a select group of people became wealthy. The workers, on the other hand, were dirt poor and had a much lower of standard of living. This contrast can be seen by Gatsby’s life and the life of the workers in the Valley of Ashes. The movie also accurately shows the cultural aspects of the 1920s, for the most part. The attire of the people is accurate. It is full of flapper dresses and gaudy accessories, which is what a normal party outfit consisted of then. It also does a good job of focusing on the music then. Music was a major part of that time period as it was being to emerge more. One inaccuracy was the style of music used. For the movie, they imitated the style of music but they modernized it and changed it to fit in this time period. The city was also incorrect. For the movie, they added many colors and there was always something new to be seen. They added onto the city for the movie to make it seem better and larger than life, when a city during that time period was still exciting but not as over the top. Despite these differences, the movie has many aspects that are accurate to the time period.…
Fitzgerald awakens three disparate men in The Great Gatsby who epitomize contrasting male characters on social, mental, physical, and stereotypical levels. Nick stays withdrawn and submissive but honest while Tom is an overbearing, careless bully. Goal-driven, generous, and emotional, Gatsby sits on a pedestal in the novel. Unfaithfulness embodies Tom, fear of love absorbs Nick, and the promise of a single true love engrosses Gatsby. Family histories split their rankings in society.…
In the novel The Great Gatsby by Scott F. Fitzgerald there is an overt use of misogyny and hypocrisy by Tom Buchanan. While Tom and his party stop by at Gatsby’s house briefly, there’s a moment where the women who is among them asks Gatsby to join them back at her home; for a party. Even though he male counterpart actively rescinds the invitation, Gatsby accepts and goes to get his things. The situation leads Tom to wonder where Gatsby had particularly met Daisy and say, “I may be old-fashioned in my ideas but women run around too much these days to suit me” (Fitzgerald 104). However early on in the novel, Tom takes Nick to frolic with his mistress, Myrtle, (26) and also, during a story it is revealed Tom was in a car wreck with a woman who…
The Great Gatsby, which was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a story that reflects the life of the 1920's in New York. The 1920's was a decade of prosperity and opportunity, but also of prohibition and organized crime. The life in the 1920's was filled with moral decay (immoral decisions) and corruptness. Throughout The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald shows how the American Dream is dead through immoral decisions and corruptness in Gatsby's and Myrtle's life.…
The Roaring Twenties were full of marvels and mysteries; good and bad. The truth in society is unveiled in The Great Gatsby in terms of wealth and The American dream. The rich people in the story are extremely wealthy, and what they say about their backstory may not be what it is in reality. Rich people have easy lives in terms of money, but the middle class and lower class workers must to toil to make ends meet. There are times where it is ugly for the poor, and Fitzgerald makes it clear. Fitzgerald also makes it clear that there really is no American Dream, or at least, The American Dream is not what it is hyped up to be. Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby shows the many faces of society in the Roaring Twenties and reveals the dark truth under them.…
At first, the female characters in Fitzgeralds "The Great Gatsby" seemed to be rather dissimilar. Daisy was the angelic and innocent beauty, Jordan was the androgynous golfer, and Myrtle was the sensuous and vivacious seductress. One was from the holy heavens above, another from the sinful depths below, and the last from the neutral in between. Seems like a good balance, however, as the story progresses, we see more and more that the angle is a fallen one, and that the human is a demon in disguise. All three women in this novel use men in some form to get what they want. Looking at the depictions of the female sex in this novel, I believe that, yes, Fitzgerald was a misogynist.…
On the surface, The Great Gatsby is a story of the thwarted love between a man and a woman. The main theme of the novel, however, encompasses a much larger, less romantic scope. Though all of its action takes place over a mere few months during the summer of 1922 and is set in a circumscribed geographical area in the vicinity of Long Island, New York, The Great Gatsby is a highly symbolic meditation on 1920s America as a whole, in particular the disintegration of the American dream in an era…
John Steinbeck’s, Of Mice and Men, and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, share a theme of dehumanization. Dehumanization is portrayed through two opposite social classes, the wealthy and the working class, and the ways in which women are treated by men. Of Mice and Men is a novel about George and Lennie, two migrant farmers, who have been hired to work at a farm after being chased out of their last job. The Great Gatsby is concerned with its protagonist, Jay Gatsby, and his devotion to rising into the upper class to impress Daisy Buchanan who left him because he was poor. In the end, characters from both novels are either dehumanized due to their class…
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is Nick Carraway’s narrative of his experiences with Jay Gatsby, his wealthy and mysterious neighbor in West Egg, Long Island. Set in 1922, a turbulent time in American history, Nick is a veteran of World War One who moved from his native Midwest to New York City to sell bonds. This novel focuses on Nick’s intense admiration for Gatsby who befriends Nick and leads him through a strange new world. In their travels, Nick and Gatsby encounter minorities and although they deal with these “Others” in a civilized manner, they regard them with condescension. The passage that embodies their beliefs about these minorities appears after they pass underneath the…
Sexism in the 1920s was extremely influential in The Great Gatsby because it is the reason Daisy escaped from the debacle scot-free. Daisy escaped without repercussion because she was seen as weaker than the men she was surrounded by. The women of the 1920s were seen as not having an opinion and if they did it was the same as their husbands. For example, Tom having an affair is perfectly acceptable, whereas the idea of Daisy being able to cheat with Gatsby is incomprehensible. Also, the color pink is seen as feminine and Gatsby loses much respect from Tom simply because he wears a pink suit. The suit projects a femininity that the males at that time had been raised to oppress. There is also the consistent theme that women are not meant to be smart and are solely meant to be pretty. For example, even Daisy has accepted that the best thing her daughter can grow up to be in their time is a “beautiful little fool.” Throughout The Great Gatsby sexism acts as a reminder of the setting because it is so prominent in the 1920s.…
In 1880 the United States experienced mass immigration, the idea behind this was that you could obtain the american dream. Throughout the book many characters are in different social classes. The way Fitzgerald displays this is so eloquently jaw dropping. He puts an unusual twist on a world that not everyone sees, It begins with Myrtle Wilson she is the absolute definition of a social class jumper. Then there is Jay Gatsby his abilities to go get things define who he is as a person, how he makes his wealth is illegal and unethical but Fitzgerald clearly lays out that you are either born into the dream or you get it illegally.…
The 1920s was a time in history defined largely by Prohibition and organized crime. In The Great Gatsby, life back then is perfectly illustrated from the wild parties to the behind the scene drug deals. Throughout the novel Fitzgerald is constantly showing you that behind the elegant parties and extreme wealth, America is not what it claims to be.…
In this movie, we get a glimpse at what life would be like during the 1920’s. This time era was filled with complete social differences, growing prosperity, as well as serious corruption. “The Great Gatsby” for the most part, does a very good job of showing off these traits. However, some things were not fully realistic or truthful to this point in time. The Prohibition era had a major impact in this time as well as social difference, racism and many other things.…
No one ever had that difficult conversation with me about the realities of depression and what it can do to a person. F. Scott Fitzgerald, a great American novelist, once said, “The loneliest moment in someone’s life is when they are watching their whole world fall apart, and all they can do is stare blankly.” Depression has the habit of destroying the lives it touches. It brings feelings of self-hatred, worthlessness, and apathy to those who get brushed by it. Worse of all, it brings comfort. A ridiculously miserable comfort that, like running through water, makes it hard to move. It is more inviting to allow oneself to get lost in the current, and drift away with the waves.…
Furthermore, The Great Gatsby is viewed as a Great American Novel because it displays the social class hierarchy. During this time, what social class a person belonged to really mattered. Those who had money tended to think they were the best while they believed those who worked towards the same position as them are to be looked down upon. Tom shows the same feeling about someone who was not already born rich. He shows that he is very prejudice about hard work.…