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    Great Gatsby Notes

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    method of narrative construction’. Many scenes within the novel are parallel to or mirrored by others‚ most notably the party scenes. Also note the way in which Nick interrupts the main dialogue with supplementing information about characters and past events. I think for form relevant things you can write about is that Nick is a narrator as well as a character‚ and so adds extra information to the plot and about characters. This makes it easier for the reader to understand the story. Also‚ as

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    Baldick. In all‚ modernism is a rejection of tradition and a hostile attitude toward the past. In The Great Gatsby it is a first person narrator. Vision and viewpoint became an essential aspect of the modernist novel as well the way the story was told became as important as the story itself." (Kathryn VanSpanckeren‚ 2003). Nick Carraway is not very reliable. He fails to remember some parts of the story‚ because he was too drunk to remember. "I have been drunk just twice in my life and the second

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    remainder of characters remain flat‚ Nick Carraway evolves into a round character through his developing moral judgments about Jordan Baker‚ Tom and Daisy Buchanan‚ and Jay Gatsby. As the narrator and an intricate character in the plot‚ Nick Carraway probes into the lives of the other characters and then forms judgments upon them. Through this experience‚ the reader learns about the insight and morals of the narrator. For example‚ during his affair with Jordan Baker‚ Nick discovers her lying habits.

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    had‚” (pg.5). 2. Does Nick follow his father’s advice? What is the result? Yes‚ Nick does follow his father’s advice by reserving his judgements which results in him being a confidante of the intimate revelation of many men. 3. Who are Daisy and Jordan? Daisy‚ a woman with sad lonely face with a bright passionate mouth‚ is Nick’s cousin. While Jordan‚ a tall slender woman with gray eyes with an amiable face‚ is a friend of Daisy’s. 4. Who is telling the story? The narrator of the story is

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    1) Write about the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in chapter2. Chapter 2 of ‘The Great Gatsby’ sees Nick Carraway and Tom Buchanan travel to ‘the valley of ashes’ to visit Tom’s mistress Myrtle. As the chapter continues the characters find themselves at a party at Myrtle’s sister’s apartment in New York. Chapter 2 follows a chronological structure‚ the events of that day in the summer of 1922 are recalled in the order that they occurred‚ creating the effect of a very realistic story being

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    Gatsby’s Journal #1 Chapter 1 (Pages 5-26) Summary: In this chapter‚ Nick is reveals as the narrator of the story. Nick’s actions show that he is a non-judgmental and respectful person because other characters tend to tell him their life stories. Nick is a “Carraway‚” a person in a family with wealth and class. Nick introduces the setting of New York City and the two “egg-like” islands called West Egg and East Egg in Long Island. Nick resides on the West Egg‚ which is not as rich and sophisticated as

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    The Great Gatsby: Chapter 1: Fitzgerald opens his novel by introducing Nick Carraway‚ the story’s narrator. Nick has‚ by his own admission‚ come "back from the East last autumn‚" jaded and embittered by his experiences there. The reader knows immediately that the story has already taken place and that Nick is telling it to us through the filter of time. He is distanced from the events at hand and is recounting them by way of memory. It is imperative that readers trust him‚ then‚ because time can

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    GREAT GATSBY (Advanced English 11) (S11) Considered the finest of Fitzgerald’s works‚ The Great Gatsby (1925) is a story of a man with a dream that symbolizes the corruption of the American Dream. The novel recounts a summer in New York City when Nick Carraway meets Jay Gatsby and finds himself involved with the man’s wealth and his obsessive desire to make contact with Carraway’s cousin‚ Daisy Buchanan. Through a series of flashbacks‚ the novel reveals the life of James Gatz‚ who discarded his past

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    These elements‚ as described earlier‚ include a place for the quester to go and a stated reason for going to that place. In the beginning chapter of The Great Gatsby‚ Nick explains the background context for which he writes about a past personal experience‚ his quest. Carraway states in his explanation‚ "I decided to go East and learn the bond business. Everybody I knew was in the bond business‚ so I supposed it could support one more single man" (Fitzgerald 3). The place

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    The in-depth critical analysis of the Great Gatsby by Frances Kerr gives an interesting insight into the narrative structure of F. Scott Fitzgerald ’s The Great Gatsby‚ the psychology of its narratorNick Carraway‚ and the reflection of F. Scott Fitzgerald ’s femininity in his critically-acclaimed novel‚ The Great Gatsby. Frances Kerr ’s critical analysis also gives additional insight into the slight paranoia of Jay Gatsby about being viewed as feminine. According to Frances Kerr ’s critical analysis

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