"Flaws of gatsby" Essays and Research Papers

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    The Great Gatsby

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    The Great Gatsby: a linguopoetic analysis of extract 1‚ chapter 1. While reading the given extract for the first time‚ we may think that it is just the description of landscape. Nick Carraway is describing the area where he lives‚ calling it “one of the strangest communities in North America”. To support this idea of strangeness he uses a number of lexical means and synonyms. Thus‚ he defines the island as “slender” and “riotous”‚ attributes that are normally used in connection with some animate

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    gatsby symbolism

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    The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald: Literary Analysis Fitzgerald uses many symbols in his novel. These are used to develop characters‚ evoke emotions‚ reveal his personal feeling about the Jazz Age‚ develop a setting‚ express duality or differences between two groups of people (rich/poor‚ East/West‚ new money/old money‚ etc.)‚ and express Gatsby’s dream. Using the Color Chart and Symbolism Chart you have been completing while reading the novel‚ choose a combined total of 4 symbols and

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    Gatsby Closing Lines

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    “‘Can’t repeat the past?’ [Gatsby] cried incredulously. ‘Why of course you can!’“ In so much as two lines the novel was born with one of its main themes – the vast obsession with the past and the failure to accept that it is‚ contrary to what Gatsby says‚ impossible to recreate. As the novel concludes‚ Nick reflects‚ “So we beat on‚ boats against the current‚ borne back ceaselessly into the past.” In some instances‚ “beating against the current” is considered a positive quality; an optimistic life-force

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    Fitzgerald uses many rhetorical strategies throughout the course of the novel The Great Gatsby. A book filled with characters each trying to pursue their own versions of the American Dream. His strategic use of devices such as diction and imagery which help to contribute to themes that can be seen throughout the book such as the past‚ class struggles‚ the use of specific color choice‚ and most importantly‚ the American Dream. In the last passage of the novel‚ Fitzgerald continues with his strong

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    Dreams in the Great Gatsby

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    social transformation and industrialization. Through this shift‚ a degradation in social moral occurred. A victim of this shift is the character J. Gatsby in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. Gatsby is “corrupted by values and attitudes that he holds in common with a society that destroys him”(44). Through this mutual and obscured social moral‚ Gatsby seems to obtain a destructive view of his “American Dream”. Where the American Dream once “consisted of the belief that people of talent in this

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    Essay #1: Oedipus the King – Flaws vs. Fate Sophocles intertwines the contrasting ideas of fate and free will throughout Oedipus the King‚ and conclusively leaves it to the audience to determine the reason for the tragedy that occurs in the story. The Oracle informs Oedipus of his destined future‚ which is to eventually shed his own father’s blood and marry‚ as well as conceive children with‚ his mother. As the story plays out‚ Oedipus comes to the realization that he has indeed fulfilled the

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    The Great Gatsby

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    it was because of this that I first met Tom Buchanan’s mistress.” While people are waiting for the train‚ between West Egg and New York they are surrounded in a place where Fitzgerald names the “valley of ashes.” The opening chapter of the Great Gatsby details the rich and American values. The second chapter is where the valley of ashes is introduced. Fitzgerald portrays this landscape in such specific words that helps the reader capture the ambience of the plot. The valley of ashes influences the

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    administration‚ of the activities of the courts‚ judges and prosecutors‚ of penal and correctional treatment‚ of the relation of psychiatry and medicine to crime‚ of the bar and its training‚ and of the relation of the press to crime.” The report highlighted flaws in the original unruly machinery of criminal justice and

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    In Hamlet we see diverse characters who can be seen as having tragic flaws. Polonius‚ the loyal advisor to the king and the father of Laertes and Ophelia has a tragic flaw. This is his loyalty to the state and more specifically the king. Polonius’s characteristic of loyalty warrants a flaw given that it leads to his tragic death. In using Aristotles interpretation of a tragedy‚ Polonius’s loyalty is also tragic. The audience worries that they may have the same fate and are also sympathetic of Polonius

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    Martin P. Sarmiento Assignment Unit 5 Analysis Pentium Flaw PENTIUM FLAW Intel’s company engineers discovered the problem in updates to the chip. However‚ it was not until a mathematician Thomas Nicely (of Lynchburg College in West Virginia) discovered the flaw during the summer/ fall of 1994 that it got in the news. He was computing the sum of the reciprocals of a large collection of prime numbers on his Pentium-based computer. Checking his computation‚ he found the result differed significantly

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