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    Morals in the Great Gatsby

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    modern American Fiction‚ The Great Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgerald takes place during the 1920’s; a time of prosperity‚ wild and hedonistic lifestyles. The Roaring Twenties was a time of change and the opportunity for self determination. It was during this time that social and moral values were drawn away from society‚ and towards immoral behaviour. The predominate theme of immorality can be seen through the character development of Tom Buchanan and Jay Gatsby. Although both engage in degraded

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald was born on September 24‚ 1896. He was named after hos ancestor‚ Francis Scott Key. Although he was intelligent he did very poorly in school and was sent to boarding school. He then enrolled in Princeton‚ but never graduated. Fitzgerald portrays much of his early life in The Great Gatsby. When Fitzgerald was younger he enlisted in the army during World War One‚ just like Gatsby enlisted in the army during the war. While Fitzgerald was stationed in the south he met a beautiful

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    In The Great Gatsby‚ there are a variety of themes. Of all the themes the book has to offer‚ the film captures best‚ the lack of morals and the corruption of the American Dream. Towards the beginning of the film when Nick first meets Myrtle she is immediately showing her lack of morals by the way she interacts with Tom‚ giving Nick a sense of their secret affair. In addition‚ the party she hosts at the apartment is over the top inappropriate compared to the one in the novel as Nick is exposed to

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    Great Gatsby Moral

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    The Great Gatsby is a modern classic of the early twentieth century‚ a novel which truly captured the luxurious atmosphere of the “Jazz Age.” It is a moniker given to the 1920’s which is suitable‚ as the spread of wealth led to a decade of glamor and decadence. Among the variations of the novel’s themes‚ the one moral that is evident and shadows over the rest of the “American Dream‚” is the ideal that a person of any racial or financial background could start a new life in America and live in riches

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    The Great Gatsby is F. Scott Fitzgerald’s most renowned book‚ and still one of the most read novels in American literature. A book with this much success was obviously was a product of great influence. The Great Gatsby draws many extensive parallels between F. Scott Fitzgerald’s life and this novel. These similarities range from basing characters off important people from his personal life to interweaving intricate love relationships he went through into the novel to recreating the American Dream

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    Amanda Wittry Mrs. Johansen English 11 17 February 2013 Alcoholism in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s‚ The Great Gatsby The author‚ Samuel Johnson once said that “Wine gives a man nothing… it only puts in motion what had been locked up in frost”. Francis Scott Fitzgerald lived during the Jazz Age‚ a time of frivolous and carefree living. He and his wife Zelda became engrossed in this lifestyle‚ they spent their time drinking and partying. They appeared to have a perfect life‚ but in reality they struggled

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    Is there more of Fitzgerald in the character of Nick than in the character of Gatsby? It is of popular opinion that The Great Gatsby is a novel with an autobiographical feel to it. If this is the case and this was Fitzgerald’s purpose‚ his own character would have to be illustrated in that of one of his fictional characters in the novel. Firstly‚ we may assume that as Nick Carraway is the narrator‚ he is the most likely to resemble the author as his views on things will most likely reflect Scott

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    Everyone has their own morals which molds them into who they are. This also often determines the choices they make. From the book The Great Gatsby‚ Nick has a decision to make based upon his standards and values of living. His decision in this case is determining what his next step would be after knowing the broken relationship between Tom and Daisy. Both Tom and Daisy are identified to value money and love more than anything else. Money plays a big role in their lives‚ because it shapes their reputation

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    Fitzgerald and Gatsby

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    Francis Scott key Fitzgerald was a popular american storyteller. Born September 24th‚ 1896 and died in December 21st‚ 1940‚ Fitzgerald lived the prime of his life in the "Roaring-Twenties". The values and morals were declining in favor of materialistic and careless attitudes following the world war. Social prestige no longer came to how hardworking and knowledgeable you were but how much property and goods you had. People began to think that instead of earning a place in society you could purchase

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    also remarked by the decay of society’s moral during the Prohibition period. Fitzgerald describes this moral decadence through his famous work‚ The Great Gatsby‚ by portraying the infamous bootlegger‚ Jay Gatsby. Prohibition was a period during the Roaring Twenties in which the government banned all of the sales‚ production and transportation of alcohol through the 18th Amendment. It happened due to the spread of the alcohol in the society during the 1800’s ‚ “American boys and men aged 15 and older

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