"How does f scott fitzgerald tell the story in chapter 8 of the great gatsby" Essays and Research Papers

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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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    “Where is he from‚ I mean? And what does he do?” (Fitzgerald 49). Everyone asks this question about the mysterious Jay Gatsby. In the Great GatsbyF. Scott Fitzgerald connected many characters through a great adventure of love and mystery. Nick‚ Tom‚ and Gatsby have unique characteristics that develop during the story. However‚ these characters never change even though they go through many experiences. The first character is the friendly Nick Carraway. As a child‚ he was taught to not judge

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    ways F. Scott Fitzgerald ends his narrative in the Great Gatsby The significance of the way F. Scott Fitzgerald ends his narrative in The Great Gatsby is important because it concludes the story and answers our questions‚ it also brings everything about Gatsby together. Fitzgerald writes in first person and this helps us to everything in Nick Carraway’s perspective. In Chapter 9 a lot of events from Gatsby’s past are revealed‚ Nick holds a funeral for him but hardly anyone turns up. Gatsby was

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    Titles Money‚ love‚ and society. The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scout Fitzgerald is about a man who worked so hard just to get a girl of his dream. The novel is not only about Gatsby but also about the difference classes in society. Even though the title of the novel is The Great GatsbyFitzgerald had a hard time deciding the title for the book before ultimately picking The Great Gatsby. Three titles he was considering beside The Great Gatsby were Among the Ash Heaps and Millionaires‚ Trimalchio

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    the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in Chapter 1 In the first chapter of The Great Gatsby‚ the reader is introduced to the main characters in the novel‚ including the narrator Nick. It also outlines Nick’s background‚ including his upbringing and new life in New York’s prestigious West Egg. It is within this chapter that the reader is first introduced to the fundamental themes of the novel - money and ideas of social class - and this sets the tone for the rest of the book. The famous Gatsby is also

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    Living Careless Can Kill You The novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and the poem “anyone live in a pretty how town by E. E. Cummings are about careless people and reveal that those who choose to be careless are generally unhappy and unable to achieve their true dreams. Both selections are about careless and reveal through the use of tone‚ diction‚ imagery symbolism and motifs‚ how people live their lives not caring about others and about the consequences‚ and therefore they generally

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    Write about some of the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in chapter 6. Fitzgerald uses Nick to introduce Gatsby’s past as “James Gatz" and his evolution into “Jay Gatsby”. Nick narrates entire the story retrospectively‚ resulting in the narration of Gatsby’s evolution containing a greater amount of Nick’s interpretations of Gatsby’s past‚ along side factuality. This is especially prominent as Nick describes Gatsby telling him “…all this very much later‚ but I’ve put it down here with the idea of exploding

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    In The Great GatsbyF. Scott Fitzgerald seemingly establishes an honest and reliable narrator named Nick Carraway at the beginning of the novel. In the opening chapter‚ Nick is presented as a loyal man with high morals. Fitzgerald wants us to see Nick as a reliable person whose moral judgment the readers can trust. If we can trust the narrator‚ then we believe in the story. Nick Carraway wants the reader to think his upbringing gave him the moral character to observe others and not pass judgment

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    Fitzgerald writes The Great Gatsby as a mirror of his own life describing his life through such characters as Nick Carraway‚ the narrator and the Jay Gatsby the‚ protagonist which are representations of Fitzgerald’s life. Fitzgerald uses his own events to play key parts in this novel. Throughout The Great Gatsby characters and events are a written reflection of Fitzgerald life making The Great Gatsby an autobiography. Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born on September 24‚ 1896 in St. Paul Minnesota

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    owners become desensitized‚ shallow‚ selfish and hypocritical. F. Scott Fitzgerald shows his distaste towards the deceitful aristocratic class through Tom and Daisy‚ the two East Eggers. Both Tom and Daisy have been blessed with their luxurious lifestyle‚ but they become superficial through the hypocrisy within their relationships; frivolity for materialism and wealth; and lack of sympathy and moral values.

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