F. Scott Fitzgerald 's The Great Gatsby

1963 Words8 Pages
1. provides a general basis of where the themes or the stance of the author is influenced from, perhaps by the society in which the author was a part of, or an experience that he underwent this in turn allows the readers to embrace the author’s ideas with more understanding characters from the novel itself can be linked back to important people or influences in the writer’s life, for example in Fitzgerald’s case Daisy was influenced by his wife most likely can connect back to what the writer was thinking when writing the novel, by knowing that for example Fitzgerald left New York in disgust of society, much like the main character Nick in the Great Gatsby
Readers can assume that Nick reflects Fitzgerald, and that he is providing his own stance on the disgust he had felt from the corrupted view of the American Dream
Also reflected in The Great Gatsby is the motif of writing as a way to find happiness, much like how Fitzgerald felt in real life
An example is of William Golding and Lord of the Flies as Golding’s father was a socialist, which meant he believed that a community should be led by the community itself, left-wing, in which the ideas can be shown in LOTR, where the one who wants to lead the group by himself is the villain, whereas the character that listens to others is the protagonist
Golding also participated in WWII, and the violence that he experienced then must have influenced the ideas in which without order, violence and chaos will ensue, and the tragedy of
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