"Some readers are irritated by nick carraway as a narrator what is your view of fitzgerald s use of nick carraway as a narrator" Essays and Research Papers

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    the reader

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    Structure and content/part Task division Learning outcome 2: Body (2): Compare writers Writers; Background Age Stature and credibility Conclusion writers How do age‚ background and nationality of writers influence language and meaning? What are the consequences of this influence? 3: Conclusion: Effects Noor‚ Martijn‚ Joos and Nadine on language and meaning Compare gravity of different aspects’ effect Introduction: [Slide 1.] Sociologists make a distinction between gender and

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    English I 17 January 2011 The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald illustrates the social rejection of the Prohibition in the 1920s. Prohibition‚ the ban on the sale and consumption of alcohol‚ made millionaires out of bootleggers like Gatsby in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel. F. Scott Fitzgerald was driven to write many novels because of his love for Zelda. Great Gatsby‚ a novel written by Fitzgerald‚ portrayed the lavish lifestyle of the rich in the 1920s and their ignorance

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    rather wonderful narrator. From the first few pages it is clear that Christopher struggles in reading others emotions. In addition to this‚ without the help of Siobhan‚ Christopher’s grammar would have made the narration of this novel disjointed and very repetitive. Although this occurs at times‚ it does not take away from the narration but rather adds to the character and quirkiness of Christopher. Christopher is unable to understand the emotions that words evoke in a reader. Early in the novel

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    Before the 1930’s or the first set of "talking picture films‚" all films were completely silent. Usually‚ they had some form of text card that would flash upon the screen explaining what had happened in the previous scene. To keep the film from just being a projected book‚ the film would be accompanied with anything from full orchestras to a pianist. A correctly timed note or a special tone would almost give a sense of depth to a two-dimensional image. Not only this‚ but the music had a second purpose

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    In the book‚ The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ one of the main focuses is the American Dream. While Gatsby’s idea of the American Dream may vary from Tom’s‚ everyone understands what the dream is to themselves. Whether it is money‚ fame‚ family‚ or success‚ the American Dream is whatever someone wants to achieve in their lifetime. There are many ways that people view the American Dream. Some view it as money‚ status‚ or fame while others view it as morals‚ family‚ and freedom. The American

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    Controlled Reader

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    to elicit a desired response from the reader‚ for there are two types of readers an author must consider: the implied reader and the actual reader. The implied reader is “assumed and created by the work itself” whereas‚ the actual reader brings his/her own experiences to the text and thus each reader takes away a different message from a text (MacMannus‚ para 1). Du Bois’s narrative‚ “A Mild Suggestion”‚ attempts to ensure a certain response‚ from the reader‚ by including a description of the passengers’

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    About the Life and Work of F. Scott Fitzgerald Writers on Fitzgerald He had one of the rarest qualities in all literature‚ and it’s a great shame that the word for it has been thoroughly debased by the cosmetic racketeers‚ so that one is almost ashamed to use it to describe a real distinction. Nevertheless‚ the word is charm — charm as Keats would have used it. Who has it today? It’s not a matter of pretty writing or clear style. It’s a kind of subdued magic‚ controlled and exquisite‚ the sort

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    misuse of science‚ rather than an accurate demonstration of its other altruistic uses; Victor had the knowledge and power to create life however just because he could do it‚ doesn’t mean he should; a moral debate still applicable to modern society. Science could be seen as fearful within Frankenstein due to the reader’s (especially that of Mary Shelley’s audience) inability to understand how it works‚ before the 1800’s and the great amount of scientific‚ social and political change and development

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    How does Fitzgerald tell the story in chapter 3? In chapter 3 Fitzgerald introduces us to the main character of his book‚ and we finally get an insight into what Gatsby is like (albeit through the eyes of Nick Carraway) during the party he throws. Even though we meet the character himself‚ Fitzgerald continues to entice us with rumours of Gatsby‚ which is significant because it shows just how artificial his entire life is – he couldn’t dispel the rumours even if he wanted to. Throughout the

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    Nick Carraway is the primary voice in chapter 5 of Fitzgerald’s 20th century tragedy. This means that all opinions and points of view are portrayed through Carraway’s first person‚ retrospective and fallible narration. Carraway is presented as fallible in this chapter‚ as the gaps in the narrative reveals Nick as a fallible narrator. He states that ‘I don’t know whether or not Gatsby went to Coney island’ yet he speculates what Wilson is thinking at the end of Chapter 8 exposing his narration to

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