highest social prestige‚ as well as their money. Their fortunes have been inherited and their roots run deep in American society. Theirs is "old money." The East Eggers place great value on tradition‚ family background‚ social convention‚ and manners‚ and they look with contempt upon others who were not born to their kind of wealth. The Buchanans live in East Egg. Tom and Daisy are example of the old money and social snobbery of East Egg. Those who live in West Egg‚ like Gatsby‚ are also
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The book we are reading is The Great Gatsby by F.Scott Fitzgerald. The topic that we researched is social class. Social class is groups of people in a certain social and economic ranking. Tom and Gatsby were wealthy so they would be in a higher social class than Nick. Nick was raised around wealthy people all his life most of the people went to Yale and are in the bond business. That’s why I think Nick is so used to being around rich people. Nick‚ Gatsby‚ and Tom are all in their own level of wealth
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twenties". "He names the Jazz Age" (177). In his novel The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald describes the social circumstances in the USA in the 1920s with typical representatives of in this time existing social classes in the post-war decade. Wilson can be seen as a representative of the poor people of those days. This class is widely ignored by numerous sources but so important for that time because they made up the majority. The former poor Gatsby stands for the newly rich because he lives the "American
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The American Dream was responsible for the mobility within social classes‚ but the concept of the American Dream died in the 1930s. Social mobility is the main idea that is correlated with the American Dream but even though the dream has slowly evolved‚ it eventually came to a standstill throughout the 1930s because of the economic changes that have reformed the economy of our nation. The concept of the American Dream was mainstreamed in the 1920s but the dream became harder to grasp afterwards.
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Social classes in the United States‚ during the 1920’s led to a social change of new ideas and personal freedom known as the “Roaring Twenties”‚ where social status could be discovered on how you live and act. In The Great Gatsby‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald uses the social classes of the characters to portray the mentality of people belonging to different social class’‚ their locations‚ and the events that form the character’s actions. (McMahon) For example‚ in the novel‚ Tom‚ Mr. Sloane‚ and a
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The Great Gatsby is the illustration of the contemporary American society of the Jazz Age. It is noted in the text that social status and class prevail there and play very significant roles concerning various issues in the light of American Dream. This classification is mainly an aftermath of World War One because of disillusionment and pursuit of wealth. Three types of social class people‚ upper class‚ middle class‚ and lower class‚ are nicely presented by Fitzgerald in The Great Gatsby. The
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The 1920’s marked a time of great post-war economic growth and F. Scott Fitzgerald captured the frenzy of society during this time by setting up three distinct social classes which are old money‚ new money‚ and no money. In the novel‚ The Great Gatsby‚ Fitzgerald introduces three main characters‚ each from a different class‚ Jay Gatsby‚ Tom Buchanan‚ and Myrtle Wilson. These characters each have many imperfections that they must contend. Wealthy or not‚ each character wants to appear as the greatest
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How does Fitzgerald depict social stratification through setting and characterization in the Great Gatsby? The Great Gatsby‚ a text by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ is a literary text that revolves around many different themes like the American Dream‚ the emancipation of women‚ loss of moral values‚ justice‚ power and many more. One such theme that is prevalently presented throughout the text is the evident distinctions of social stratification. Social stratification has been prevalently developed through
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This passage is the last three paragraphs of the story. The passage is Nick’s thoughts on Gatsby and the future. This passage ends the story and concludes Nick’s narrative. It happens while Nick is going home to Minnesota in a train. It illustrates the main theme of the un-attainability of the American Dream. In the first sentence of the passage‚ Fitzgerald uses the word "brooding" to show the mood of Nick‚ the narrator. Brooding gives an impression of deep‚ dark thinking. Next‚ he talks about the
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Social Justification In the Great Gatsby During the time period of the novel The Great Gatsby by Scott F. Fitzgerald the U.S was in the midst of the famous Jazz Age in which the economy was expanding vastly‚ but also‚ shifting social attitudes. The lower class dreamed of living the American Dream that their eyes could see‚ but were oblivious to the true lives behind the elegant parties‚ and opulent components that made up the upper class. The rich were covered by a vast blanket of illusion that
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