character Nick Carraway to start off the chapter by having him narrate. And throughout Chapter 1 we are introduced to many other characters such as Tom‚ Jordan‚ Daisy and Gatsby. The use of narrational voice is very important in The Great Gatsby as Fitzgerald has created the character Nick‚ not only to narrate the story‚ but also be a key person in the novel. This adds a personal touch‚ but it could also make parts of story bias or inaccurate. We get hinted at this inaccuracy when Nick says ’I have
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want to listen." When Nick asks why she wants to eavesdrop‚ Jordan tells him that "Tom’s got some woman in New York." Her name is Myrtle Wilson‚ who lives in a shabby New York suburb near railroad tracks. Apparently it is she who called Tom. Shortly after Tom and Daisy return to the table‚ the phone rings again and Tom answers it. Meanwhile‚ Daisy‚ who speaks in a "low‚ thrilling voice‚" tells Nick that since she last saw him she has become "cynical about everything." When Nick asks about her three-year-old
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Great Gatsby‚ the theme of the American Dream is clearly present and shown through the wealth‚ the excessive lifestyle‚ but more importantly‚ the downfall of the American Dream. This theme is portrayed by certain characters such as Jay Gatsby‚ Nick Carraway and Daisy Buchanan. Jay Gatsby is a young man who achieved great
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CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT In a novel the narrator is the vehicle‚ the one telling the story to the reader. Laying out critical information‚ describing the setting‚ creating mood and atmosphere‚ and generating information upon which we create our opinions on characters and events in the novel. These are classically what we associate the narrator with regard to the novel and its progression. The characters that the author describes are the major focus of the novel. Characters change and develop over
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The interpretation of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s work: The Great Gatsby This Research‚ paper – which is a mixture of a book review and an analysis of a problem - will present ideas about searching the American Dream in connection with The Great Gatsby and the main characters and how succesfully they could live the American Dream according to the work of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Moreover‚ this research paper will be about some interesting symbols by Fitzgerald. Also‚ it will give some general information
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Great Gatsby‚ spoken by the narrator Nick Carraway‚ who reflects upon Gatsby’s life‚ likening him unto a boat against the current of the times. Nick’s avid description of the hardships Gatsby faced has more dimension than the utter surface it surmises. Nick’s farewell is infused with Gatsby as a character that further examination pinpoints the underlying meaning that Fitzgerald clearly wrote. Gatsby’s life‚ his dreams‚ and his failures; all summed up by one last line. Nick likens Gatsby’s struggles
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When he describes a scene or a setting‚ a mental image of the place being described constructs itself inside your mind‚ almost as if you were watching a room in a house being built piece by piece. For example‚ when Nick Carraway first enters the living room of the Buchanan ’s palatial estate‚ Fitzgerald ’s descriptions make it impossible not to envision such a room: a "bright‚ rosy-colored space‚ fragilely bound into the house by French windows at either end." By using
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BJTU’s Course Thesis for History and Anthology of American Literature The Great Gatsby and the Lost Generation | Institute: | School of Languages | | | Major: | English | | | Student: | Chen Haoxiang | | | Reg. No. | 10321004 | | | Tutor: | Dr. Zhang Junxue | | June 08‚ 2012 The Great Gatsby and the Lost Generation By Chen Haoxiang Abstract: The Great Gatsby is regarded as the most widely taught and widely read American literary classic. A classic is a work that
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of The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald introduces the story using detailed imagery to create a mood for the book. The narrator‚ Nick Carraway‚ just moved to West Egg‚ Long Island‚ a neighborhood of up and coming young‚ wealthy people. While Nick himself isn’t over the top wealthy‚ he can afford a modest house next door to Gatsby’s mansion. Since he is in New York now‚ Carraway goes to visit his cousin Daisy and her husband Tom Buchanan at their posh home across the bay in East Egg. East Egg is a
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Chapter five of Francis Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby focusses on the afternoon tea in which Jay Gatsby is to reconnect with Daisy Buchanan as planned in chapter four. The chapter begins with Nick coming home to West Egg seeing his neighborhood in “ablaze” and leading him to fear his home had caught on fire (Fitzgerald 86). It turns out the “fire” was simply Gatsby’s monstrous mansion illuminating light which highlights the actual multitude that is the Gatsby estate. As the chapter
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