Analytical Essay of the Great Gatsby The idea of social status pops up many times in the Great Gatsby and it compared through many different forms from parties, transportation, and ways of thought. Although the main way to determine one’s social status is to see the amount of wealth the person has. The Valley of Ashes is used to represent the area where the people of poverty live. The Valley of Ashes is a land where “ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills,” and where “ash- gray men swarm with leaden spades [to] stir up an impenetrable cloud” which fills the air smog and ashes (Fitzgerald 23). This represents how the poverty of New York must live in heavily crowded industrial areas with poor air quality where nothing escapes the dirty ash
F. Scott FitzGerald, using the stark contrast between these two worlds, clearly shows the separation between the haves and have not’s and the have not’s continuous struggle to cross the boundary, rise to the top and become a part of accepted society. Firstly, the reader is introduced to what is known as the Valley of the Ashes: a bleak wasteland that is the midpoint between the two eggs and represents a place were the
As the land dried up, great clouds of dust and sand, carried by the wind, covered everything and the word "Dust Bowl"
The article is making connection between the valley of ashes and the poverty: “Valley of Ashes represents absolute poverty and hopelessness” (“The Great Gatsby; Symbolism and Motifs”). This article is also showing the differences between rich and poor. Therefore, this article is a good source to know basic information about the themes and
Based off the description, Nick depicts the Valley of Ashes as a desolate and poor place where there seems to be no hope. This depiction helps to show the contrast between Valley of Ashes and West/East
Have you ever admired anyone in your life to the point that this person seems like he or she is more than human or God like. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s, The Great Gatsby, the main character, Nick, introduces Jay Gatsby in a divine like way even though he does not really know much about him at this point. As the story progresses, a series of events that occur guide Nick to finding out the truth about Gatsby. His view of Gatsby clearly changes through this period of time and Nick begins to picture Gatsby as a regular human being who is not much different than him. Nick portrays Gatsby as a divine figure because Nick does not know Gatsby’s hidden truths, but as Nick begins to learn the truth, Gatsby loses his angelic characteristics.
In the beginning of The Great Gatsby, the narrator Nick is critical of the upper class, but hopeful. Toward the end he is disappointed because he realizes how the lifestyle they live is unrealistic. During the novel, the upper class is disrespectful and full of themselves. When he gets to know the characters he notices how the upper class is so unfriendly and snotty. This easy and luxurious lifestyle that they are living is unattainable to everyone because nobody can get there. The American dream is described as making a ton of money and being snotty about it. In the novel, the hopeful and disgusted tones reflect Nick’s points of view on the unrealistic society and his points of view changes when he sees how greedy they all are
The dale they call Pitgorm, an alluvial valley as far north and away from civilization as one can get, seemed at peace. At the head of the valley against the forest is the Morgbos: a dangerous water-soaked quagmire. The Isenkal Brook, which runs down the east side of the valley, has its roots there. With the fog lying on the moor and tumbling into the dale, most anything could pass unseen. The quiet was not
Supporting sentences: Its occupants represents those confined in their pursuit of the American Dream meanwhile the rich enjoy their wealth and success in East and West Egg. In reality, the valley of ashes is described as a grey, desolate and filthy motor road, lodged between West Egg and the rest of New York. It
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald published made around the 1920's when the war had just ended. The economy was beginning to develop and immigration was rising, but there was still segregation between social classes. Throughout The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald disapproved of the idea that the ideal person should have an equal opportunity to achieve success, through hard work and determination. First of all, those lower class who work hard do not attain the prosperity they deserve. Not only that, but those who try to climb the social class will be brought down by people who are of the upper class because of there social status.
The Valley of Ashes, situated between New York and West Egg, is home to the poorest of the poor, the men who work hard for hardly anything, and yearn for nothing
The Psychoanalysis Behind Gatsby’s Character Meehan, Adam. “Repetition, race and desire in The Great Gatsby.” Journal of Modern Literature 37.2 (2014): 76+. Literature Resource Center. Web.
F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 “The Great Gatsby” tells a good story, but the real artwork is in how the story is delivered. The story is imbued with Fitzgerald's sense of a dream that is stronger than reality, in which the main character, Jay Gatsby's love for Daisy is a romantic illusion. The book exists in its own arena of expertise that it is difficult to understand why so many people, film directors, theater producers and dance designers are now determined to adapt it into different forms. After reading the Great Gatsby numerous times, I have come to appreciate all the literary nuances that contribute the Fitzgerald’s seminal masterpiece. The diction, perspective, chronology, and dialogue create an experience for the reader that can lead
again into a valley in the very midst of the mountains. It was a valley of brown, bare, desert soil, in
Parker also explains her purpose through the use of stylistic devices like imagery. She uses concrete images to portray the idea of poverty. She explains that “Poverty is staying up all night on cold nights to watch the fire knowing one spark on the newspapers covering the walls means your sleeping child dies in flames.” What adds to the readers idea of poverty is the horrendous image of a child burning to death, also the newspaper-covered wall of a make-shift house. There are plenty other nouns like grits with no oleo, runny noses, and diapers that paint an image of poverty in the reader ́s head. You also have the sense of ́smell ́ through this essay by phrases that describe the “sour milk”, “urine”, and “stench of rotting teeth”. You can also ́feel ́ poverty through hands that are “so cracked and red”, since the author cannot afford vaseline. The use of imagery makes the a!udience more conscious of the effects of poverty. !
The sentence ‘the motor road hastily joins… land’ suggests the Valley of ashes is is home to the sorts of people the wealthy are content to overlook. This can also be seen : ‘men swarm up’, likening people to insects, implying they are