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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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“I was within and without. Simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life.” In The Great Gatsby, the narrator, Nick Carraway, reveals just about everything around him except for his own aspect on things. This passage was one of the few times that Nick actually gave his own opinion on the current matters that he had been swept up in, once he made the move from his hometown in Minnesota to the luxurious village of West Egg. The quote, although masterly woven into the story’s plotline, is easily picked out because of not only the rarity of the narrator’s opinion, but because of the generalization it poses for the reader to consider. Nick’s vague words do not go into detail, leaving the reader to wonder what exactly caused Nick’s “enchantment” and “repulsion.” Was it the grandiose parties, the glitz and the glam of the people, or the national attitude of the youth and the rich? It was all of the above, and more. During the 1920’s, it was a time of loose morals and materialistic dreams, of exciting rest and lazy work, of playing and partying, of living life luxuriously. If one didn’t participate in any of these subjects, one was considered an outsider, a renegade. One was shunned. Since society was as influential as a person’s conscious - possibly even more so - a person’s ambition shaped from innocent means to becoming filthy rich, notoriously famous and downright successful. Today, our perception on greed is that it’s a terrible idea to practice, and

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