The Great Gatsby Moral Decay Essay

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    We all know Nick Carraway as the narrator in The Great Gatsby. One thing I have always wondered about while reading the novel is Nick's place in society. I mean, he felt fascinated and frustrated at the same time in regards to the selfishness and greed around him to the point in which he could barely tolerate anyone but himself. Yet, he considers Jay Gatsby to be the exception of his contempt? What might Nick's goal be in portraying the world around him the way he does? Furthermore, what might this

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    Symbolism in The Great Gatsby In the novel The Great Gatsby by Francis Scott Fitzgerald there are many different kinds of symbols used. Fitzgerald uses colors and material luxuries as the two main symbols in the novel. The author uses these symbols most frequently in the novel. The symbolism is carefully incorporated within the novel which makes it hard to detect at first glance. Within these symbols Fitzgerald mainly expresses feelings and the American Dream. Fitzgerald uses colors like an artist

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    11th H lit 10 Apr 2024 The Illusion of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby In the luminous wake of the Roaring Twenties, F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby masterfully dissects the intricate facade of the American Dream. Through the opulent parties and tragic characters that populate its pages, the novel lays bare the hollow core of the dream that promised prosperity and happiness to all. This essay contends that The Great Gatsby portrays the American Dream as an elusive illusion, showcasing

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    English 3 11 August 2015 Symbols of The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerlad’s novel, The Great Gatsby, represents a time in which the American dream played an important role in societal structures during the 1920’s. Fitzgerald places a large emphasis on the rich and wealthy, while also depicting how their continued obsession with social status leads to a moral and social decay among all the characters in the novel. Symbolic elements throughout The Great Gatsby all come together to represent the unattainability

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    The Great Gatsby is a novel that illustrates the society in the 1920 's and the associated beliefs, values and dreams of the American population at that time. These beliefs, values and dreams can be summed up be what is termed the "American Dream"; a dream of money, wealth, prosperity and the happiness that supposedly came with the booming economy and get-rich-quick schemes that formed the essential underworld of American upper-class society. This underworld infiltrated the upper echelons and created

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    Joanne Kwan April 24, 2012 Comparative Essay: Tom’s Party v.s. Gatsby’s Party The comparison between the two parties of Tom and Gatsby portrays the main difference between a Manhattan party and a West Egg (New money) party. F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author, uses this comparison to portray the 1920’s as an era of corrupted social and moral values. Although the parties at both Tom and Gatsby’s are drenched in alcohol, the motivation behind the parties is different. Tom’s main goal in throwing

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    The Great Gatsby is a novel that illustrates the society in the 1920's and the associated beliefs, values and dreams of the American population at that time. These beliefs, values and dreams can be summed up be what is termed the "American Dream", a dream of money, wealth, prosperity and the happiness that supposedly came with the booming economy and get-rich-quick schemes that formed the essential underworld of American upper-class society. This underworld infiltrated the upper echelons and created

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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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    The decay of the American Dream is a result of the 1920 era of exceptional prosperity and excess material. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby portrays the American Dream of originally being about discovery of one’s self and obtaining happiness. Fitzgerald then proves the 1920s is filled with cynicism, selfishness and meaningless pursuit of money and pleasure in association to the American Dream. In result, the disintegration of the American Dream is fostered from the desire for wealth and money

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    THE GREAT GATBSY HAS ROARING RELEVANCE! Fitzgerald’s canonical classic, The Great Gatsby, has turned heads and revelated many, but what does this novel offer to our sophisticated and technologically-advanced world today? The curious jazzin’ Josephine Rogers investigates… Why do we read the classics? Well, it simple… the classics are books that exert a peculiar influence, and are a voyage of discovery at their first reading. The New York Review defines a classic as, “A book that has never finished

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