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    The Great Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ portrays the Jazz Age and the people living during the time. The reader watches the unfortunate story of the mysterious Jay Gatsby and his love for Daisy Buchanan through the eyes of Nick Carraway. His semi-involved character witnesses the events unfold right in front of his eyes as he lives next door to Gatsby. Critics often regard this tale of love‚ betrayal‚ and immoral living an essential classic for all high-school students. The cover provides

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    THE GREAT GATSBY: Study Questions 1. We see all the action of The Great Gatsby from the perspective of one character whose narration seems to be shaped by his own values and temperament. What is Nick Carraway like‚ what does he value‚ and how do his character and his values matter to our understanding of the action of the novel? 2. Early in the novel‚ Nick says of Gatsby that he “turned out all right at the end” (p.2) Later‚ however‚ after he tells Gatsby “You’re worth the whole damn bunch

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    The novel “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a tragedy in which true love does not prosper. Fitzgerald’s pencil coursed with the composure of the arm of a composer as it birthed beautiful images to convey concealed connotations. Perhaps the most significant of all the images is the “pyramid of pulpless halves” that appeared as a waste product of one of Gatsby’s fancy fandangos. The image of Gatsby’s trash is comparable to another image of trash found earlier in the novel. “The valley

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    by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ the theme of old money and new money are described as inherited wealth and recently acquired wealth. Both of these themes share an almost similar amount of wealth but are handled and spent differently. The two places along the east cost in this novel represent these themes. East Egg represents old money whereas as West Egg represents new money. Throughout the novel Fitzgerald clearly depicts these two themes and how they are very important. In this novel Fitzgerald shows

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    Most people want to believe that money will buy you happiness‚ but Gatsby is a great example of how this is not the case. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ Gatsby and Daisy becomes careless people because they believe that money will protect them forever. Gatsby went well out of his way to make money just to get the attention of Daisy. The desire for money drives all of the characters in The Great Gatsby to make poor choices that will come back to hurt their relationships and ruin their

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    Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ he uses symbolism in the form of his characters and to develop a theme‚ the declination of the American Dream. Another theme that ties into the American Dream is class structure‚ which is demonstrated by the geography in the text. All of the characters are symbolic of different classes in American Society‚ from the richest to the poorest. The Great Gatsby offers a peek to all the hopes and dreams of people living during the Jazz Age. Fitzgerald had cleverly divided

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    response to the above view. The USA in the 1920s is remembered as the ‘Roaring Twenties’‚ an age of new life‚ of hedonism and opportunity following the horrors the Great War. The decade is synonymous with wealth‚ materialism and unprecedented freedom. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby provides an insight into the exciting and prosperous lives of the American people as they embark on the limitless potential of the American Dream and therefore it conveys a picture of 1920s American society. With reference

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    money and the new consumer culture of the 1920s dominates human thinking and behavior in ‘The Great Gatsby’? One of the key themes in The Great Gatsby is ‘The morality and importance of Wealth’ in high end New York social circles of the 1920s. Fitzgerald himself lived during this period of significant culture change in America and therefore I feel his own feelings and concerns on obsession with money and the new consumer culture was one reason as to why he wrote this novel. He begins by establishing

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    A Story’s Portrayal of its Author: F. Scott Fitzgerald Francis Scott Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul‚ Minnesota in 1896 and became one the most renowned American authors of his time. F. Scott Fitzgerald attended Princeton University only to leave without a degree and join the army. While stationed near Montgomery‚ Alabama‚ he met Zelda Sayer‚ whom he would later marry‚ and who would influence many of Fitzgerald’s stories. Fitzgerald is best remembered for his depiction of America in the 1920s

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald F. Scott Fitzgerald is in many ways one of the most important American writers of the twentieth century. In his first novel‚ This Side of Paradise‚ Fitzgerald epitomized the mindset of an era with the statement that his generation had‚ "grown up to find all Gods dead‚ all wars fought‚ and all faiths in man shaken…"(Fitzgerald 307). Aside from being a major literary voice of the twenties and thirties‚ Fitzgerald was also among "The Lost Generation’s" harshest

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