and Common Failure to Achieve the American Dream Read in high schools and colleges across the nation‚ “The Great Gatsby” has been called “the great American novel” by a handful of scholars and critics (Hoover‚ " ’The Great Gatsby ’ Still Challenges Myth of American Dream."). A person can easily find a copy of the book as well as media analysis of “Gatsby” almost anywhere. “The Great Gatsby” examines the luxury of American life in the 1920s as everyone chases their individual interpretation of “the
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Critical Analysis of the Great Gatsby “I think a woman gets more happiness out of being gay‚ light-hearted‚ unconventional‚ mistress of her own fate…. I want [my daughter] to be a flapper‚ because flappers are brave and gay and beautiful‚” from Zelda Fitzgerald. In the 1920’s Zelda Fitzgerald says she wants her daughter to be a flapper‚ a woman who smoked cigarettes‚ drank‚ drove vehicles‚ and did not respect what was considered acceptable behavior. Zelda Fitzgerald is the wife of the author F.
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The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald’s use of Motif Many themes were shown by F. Scott Fitzgerald from the novel‚ The Great Gatsby. One of the themes is that some of the people aren’t satisfied with the way they live. The motif of cheating provides a different viewpoint of the character and the way they think about themselves. The way a person acts is the way they are. The motif represents the differences between the characters social status‚ how they treat others and act around them tells the
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The novel The Great Gatsby written by F. Scott Fitzgerald details the character’s quest for materialism and how they each become engulfed by the obsession for more‚ consequently leading to their desensitization to the meaningful aspects of life. Daisy’s lust to further her elite social status led her to choose her husband for wealth rather than love which was ultimately the catalyst to her world coming undone. Myrtle fantasized about an alternate reality that consisted of lavish material items that
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desired. For the characters of The Great Gatsby‚ a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ these dreams manifest themselves as a man who has obtained true love‚ a wealthy woman living among the elite of East Egg‚ and a passionate lover. The characters‚ fully and utterly centered around achieving their greatest aspirations‚ powerfully portray the catastrophic repercussions that result from a lack concern for the well-being of others in attempt to reach one’s dream. In The Great Gatsby‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald suggests
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elders‚” said F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ the author of The Great Gatsby. After the World War I‚ abnormal economical success dominated over Americans‚ and caused amorality over the society. At that time‚ people pursued cheap pleasure and full of entertainments: parties‚ extravagance‚ and dissipation. The Great Gatsby describes that the Jazz Age through the protagonist‚ Jay Gatsby‚ who was in the lower class‚ struggles with Tom Buchanan and with George Wilson to gain power for achieving his ex-lover‚ Daisy—who
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Nick from Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby says of those who live in East Egg‚ “They smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness”. In fact‚ their carelessness is the result of their wealth. Their money gives them a sense of entitlement. They do not question their actions or how their choices might affect others because it is their right to do whatever they please. This carelessness and lack of regard for others results in Tom and Daisy hurting
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Illusions in The Great Gatsby The American dream. Every American has his or her own ideals and preferences‚ but all share more or less the same dream. In The Great Gatsby‚ Fitzgerald explores what happens when this dream is taken too far. What is one to do when the dream begins to overshadow reality? What are the consequences when a successful man allows the dream to matter more than life itself? Fitzgerald tells all through the hopeless Gatsby‚ idealistic Nick‚ and ignorant Myrtle.
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A Marxist Look on The Great Gatsby Throughout "The Great Gatsby‚" F. Scott Fitzgerald characterizes the citizens of East Egg as careless in some form. This relates to the prominent class issue seen all through "Gatsby." It seems as though Daisy and Tom almost look down upon others. At one point in the book‚ Nick says "in a moment she looked at me with an absolute smirk on her lovely face as if she had asserted her membership in a rather distinguished secret society to which she and Tom belonged
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An Analysis of Morals within The Great Gatsby Following the end of World War I‚ the citizens of the United States began to experience the transition from a war-effort focus to an artistic‚ cultural and capitalistic-driven society. The increasing rise of new capitalists establishes new social classes that not only define the identity of risk-taking entrepreneurs in the Roaring Twenties‚ but also contributes to an even greater divide between the traditional of-the-earth working class citizens and their
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