The Great Gatsby Jay Gatsby Essay

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    because they show you how life can really be and the more you read into it, the more you feel you can relate to it. In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby" many of the characters have their flaws which reels in the reader even more. This novel shows how some characters have gone through some things to be where they are now. The Great Gatsby relates to the American Dream in certain things such as luxury, ambition, love affairs and more. Author Fareed Zakaria opines regarding the so called

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    The Great Gatsby exemplifies the way of America during the Jazz Age, also known as “The Roaring Twenties.” The tale of a deeply flawed man captures the idea of any possibility of achieving the American Dream- “the set of ideals in which freedom includes the opportunity for prosperity and success.” Despite the author tip-toeing around the way Gatsby earned his wealth, there is a dark suspicion that secretly runs throughout Fitzgerald’s novel. Jay Gatsby is not the all-around guy he is cracked up to

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    The Great Gatsby “Life is much more successfully looked at from a single window” (Fitzgerald 4). This quote from the timeless classic The Great Gatsby references how an individual should only have one worldview. The Great Gatsby portrays characters with varying world views, some of which will be deliberated in this paper. Some characters have a more Biblical worldview, while others are more humanistic. This book also brings up issues of morals and ethics, leading to the underlying theme: “the love

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    than in The Great Gatsby. Every character seems to represent an aspect of the classic “Jazz Age”, such how the desire for wealth can corrupt the American dream. Despite the decade’s glitzy title, the book’s portrayal of it is anything but flattering; Fitzgerald artfully reveals the hollowness of wealthy society and the fact that the American dream is not achievable for everyone. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the social norms of the 1920’s cause the protagonist, Jay Gatsby, to be obsessed

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby Any American is taught a dream that is purged of all truth. The American Dream is shown to the world as a belief that anyone can do anything; when in reality, life is filled with impossible boundaries. In the novel, The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald gives us a glimpse into the life of the upper class during the roaring twenties through the eyes of a moralistic young man named Nick Carraway. It is through the narrator's dealings with the upper class that

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    The Great Gatsby is a movie that audiences will enjoy with solid performances by Leonardo DiCaprio as Jay Gatsby and Tobey Maguire as Nick Carraway. This 2013 movie directed by Baz Luhrmann is based off the book from the 1925 novel called “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Set in a fictional town in Long Island NY in 1922, during the roaring twenties, the story follows a mysterious millionaire Jay Gatsby who throws lavish parties every week for the entire town. The underlying reason Gatsby

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    as an escape. In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald uses Jay Gatsby’s life to portray the corrupt nature of wealth. Although Gates grew up poor, his increase in wealth over the years decreases his morals and happiness. Gatsby has not always been corrupt; in fact, his father says that growing up, he “was bound to get ahead”. He always had some resolves like this or something” which is evident through the daily schedule Gatsby Jay kept as a young man (173). Growing up, Gatsby was organized and had

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    In the novel The Great Gatsby, the American Dream plays a huge roll, albeit opposite to what many would think. Both of the characters that exemplify the American Dream, Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby, have abandoned all in search of the American Dream. But, as F. Scott Fitzgerald has shown, they both fail to receive the happiness that they were looking for. Jay Gatsby, the main character of interest in the novel The Great Gatsby, began his search for the American Dream at a very young age. Born in

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    tragic death of Jay Gatsby conveyed in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby exemplifies the moral decay of the 1920s. Fitzgerald is critical of a hedonistic society consumed in materialism, he expresses this through the men and women who dazzled like champagne and stars at Gatsby’s parties, which were taken by the root in society to live the perfect world of their own. James Gatz achieves his dream of self transformation. He acquires wealth and status and becomes Jay Gatsby. It is Gatsby’s

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    Jay Gatsby becomes so enthralled in his American Dream and the immoral means that he would use to obtain it, however, that he could not see foreboding events around him. He acts in a manner of obliviousness when many of the people whom he associates with mock him, such as when and an unnamed woman in Gatsby’s house in Chapter VI gives an insincere invitation for Gatsby to come to dinner and, after Gatsby naively accepts the invitation, Tom ridicules him by asking Nick, “Doesn’t he know she doesn’t

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