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Fitzgerald's Criticisms Of The 1920s In 'The Great Gatsby'

Satisfactory Essays

Clint Carney
Mr.Schraufnagel
AP Lang and Comp
7 March 2016
Fitzgerald’s Criticisms of the 1920s in The Great Gatsby
In the novel The Great Gatsby, the author, F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrays his views on life in the early post world war I society. The 1920s or the “Roaring twenties” was a period of economic prosperity in the United States. This, however, was a success that did not distribute equally among the varying classes, as an increasingly disturbing gap emerged between the rich and the poor. Those with wealth began to lavish themselves with material goods and extravagant lifestyles, while those without sank into the depressing, grotesque scene of poverty. Through a winding story of love and loss, Fitzgerald gives the audience

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