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    Mikaeel

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    perceived‚ his potential‚ this greatness is only limited to an extent. This limitation of greatness is due to his pursuit of a distorted American Dream‚ and this is the central idea of the novel. For Gatsby‚ the American Dream is the love of Daisy Buchanan‚ a woman whom Gatsby has perceived with an idealistic image of the perfect trophy wife‚ an image which Daisy neither possesses nor deserves. In the novel‚ the greatness (and limitations of that greatness) of Gatsby is developed through how Fitzgerald

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    Biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald About F. Scott Fitzgerald Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born on September 24‚ 1896‚ the only son of an aristocratic father and a provincial‚ working-class mother. He was therefore the product of two divergent traditions: while his father’s family included the author of "The Star-Spangled Banner" (after whom Fitzgerald was named)‚ his mother’s family was‚ in Fitzgerald’s own words‚ "straight 1850 potato-famine Irish." As a result of this contrast‚ he was exceedingly

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    fought in the Great War. After the war and a period of restlessness‚ he decided to go East to learn the bond business. At the book’s beginning‚ Carraway has just arrived in New York‚ living in West Egg village. He was going to have dinner with Tom Buchanan and his wife Daisy. Tom was an enormously wealthy man and a noted football player at Yale‚ and Daisy was Carraway’s second cousin. Jordan mentions that‚ since Carraway lives in West Egg‚ he must know Gatsby. Another woman‚ Jordan Baker‚ is also there

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    “The Lost Generation” The novel The Great Gatsby written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ as about the Jazz Age in New York and how a man tries to turn back time to be with the woman he loves. Through our narrator‚ Nick Carraway‚ we learn what happened in the past of his cousin Daisy and his neighbor Gatsby. Symbolism is used heavily throughout the story either using colors or the carelessness of the people in the story. After the Great War‚ the soldiers returning became known as the Lost Generation as

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    agrees to go out with you‚ and somehow everything is different. The whole world seems to disappear‚ and it’s just the two of you prancing through fields and ignoring the imminent destruction of the universe. Or the stairs. Chapter 5 Love Daisy Buchanan> Quote 6 Suddenly‚ with a strained sound‚ Daisy bent her head into the shirts and began to cry stormily. "They’re such beautiful shirts‚" she sobbed‚ her voice muffled in the think folds. "It makes me sad because I’ve never seen such – such beautiful

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    powerful‚ physical‚ and dishonest. Women are shown in a terrible light that casts the majority of them as tempting‚ submissive‚ passive‚ and petty. The gender of roles in the Great Gatsby is portrayed within the characters‚ particularly in Tom and Daisy Buchanan‚ Jay Gatsby‚ Jordan‚ Nick‚ and Myrtle Wilson. The traditional gender roles in the Great Gatsby

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    A billionaire‚ an astronaut‚ or the next president of the United States of America. Every child grows up with a dream in their head of who they want to be when they grow up. While for many people‚ this dream fades throughout their lifetime or becomes something more realistic‚ some will stop at nothing to become what they have always wanted to be and obtain what they have always desired. For the characters of The Great Gatsby‚ a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ these dreams manifest themselves as a man

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    Great Gatsby Moral

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    The Great Gatsby is a modern classic of the early twentieth century‚ a novel which truly captured the luxurious atmosphere of the “Jazz Age.” It is a moniker given to the 1920’s which is suitable‚ as the spread of wealth led to a decade of glamor and decadence. Among the variations of the novel’s themes‚ the one moral that is evident and shadows over the rest of the “American Dream‚” is the ideal that a person of any racial or financial background could start a new life in America and live in riches

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    The Great Gatsby Summary

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    Chapter 1 "His speaking voice‚ a gruff husky tenor‚ added to the impression of fractiousness he conveyed. There was a touch of paternal contempt in it‚ even toward people he liked ­ and there were men at New Haven who had hated his guts." -Pg. 7 fractious (adj) - unruly‚ quarrelsome‚ irritable. "Something was making him nibble at the edge of stale ideas as if his sturdy physical egotism no longer nourished his peremptory heart." - Pg. 20-21 peremptory (adj) - admitting of no contradiction‚ often

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    decision making

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    making namely the individual‚ the group and the organizational. Bratton et al. (2010) outlined that on different levels of decision-making and there are also different key issues on the effects that they have respectively. Supported by the words of Buchanan and Huczynsk (2010)‚ in an individual decision-making‚ there are restraints to information and personal prejudice. In group decision-making‚ there are effects of group coherency on individuals’ interpretation‚ point of view and conduct towards the

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