The Great Gatsby Moral Decay Essay

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    Looking at The Great Gatsby through our new literary lense, Clash of Class, I was able to understand the social divide that is very apparent throughout the novel. Often times The Great Gatsby is looked at as a love story, but there is much more to the historic novel than just love. The Clash of Class lense looks deeper, beyond money and power, into the novel and required me to really explore the differences between East Egg( Old money) and West Egg (New Money). Money is a defining quality throughout

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald uses symbols throughout the novel ‘The Great Gatsby’ to give a greater meaning to concepts that appear to be simple objects. This allows Fitzgerald to express messages or ideas found important and meaningful indirectly and sometimes leaving the symbol open for the readers’ perception. Fitzgerald’s novel ‘The Great Gatsby’ displays perfect examples of symbolism. The Valley of the ashes characterises dullness and decay, Dr Eckleburg’s eyes, observed as the eyes of God as well as

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    In the novel “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald, many different symbols and hidden messages foreshadow and represent the truth behind what truly happens. Through symbols such as the green light, valley of ashes, and social classes, Fitzgerald achieves to capture the problems between the rich and the poor, the enchantment of wealth and the exploitation that follows it, and the allure of fulfilling the American dream. In The Great Gatsby, the social class distinction portrays the social status

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    The Great Gatsby was written to represent the rise and fall of the American Dream. The author places the rich and wealthy lifestyle on a high pedestal while he demonstrates the dramatic consequences of moral and social decay amongst the characters. As each defining moment is uncovered, the American Dream gradually crumbles in the selfish hands of those who remain ignorant to anything else in the world. Symbols play a huge role in The Great Gatsby. They add to the understanding we take from the novel

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    Brylee Seagraves Elizabeth West Research paper F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby develops a theme of greed and constant discontent within the main characters through literary elements such as tone, symbolism, imagery, and dialogue. In the Great Gatsby the contemporary society of a prosperous America during the time after the war is portrayed by optimist values using money and greed. Money weakens the values of even the most humble upperclassman making him vulnerable to the greed and

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    "The Great Gatsby", essentially assuming the role of a historical documentation of the period. While his work can be characterised as almost poetic, his narratives often

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    The Decay of the American Dream The novel, “The Great Gatsby”, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, features the decay of the American dream during the 1920s. It is a critique of human actions and hypocrisy, with the main character being Jay Gatsby, a rich man who pines for his lost love Daisy. During the 1920s, America suffered the great stock market crash, which led to the nation’s despair. Fitzgerald mirrors this event through Gatsby’s great loss. At that time, America was full of distinct social classes

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    that have a decaying amount. Both of those types of people crave more and more, both reside in either of the two contrasting peninsulas, East Egg and West Egg. The two headlands have numerous amounts of variance with each other in the novel, The Great Gatsby. Written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the narrative is set during the 1920’s in New York City, as well as Long Island, and the two peninsulas dubbed “East Egg” and “West Egg.” There is a striking contrast between the two regions, however, not as many

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    The Great Gatsby Essay: The American Dream The most iconic lines of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s classic novel The Great Gatsby were his concluding statements: “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter—tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther… And one fine morning—” (189). These lines leave readers pondering about one of the most important themes of the story—the American Dream. The American Dream

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    atmosphere in The Great Gatsby and reveals the crumbling foundations upon which such prosperity was built. As the moral foundations of American society begin to decay, so do the foundations of the American Dream itself. By having characters from all social classes share a common sentiment of discontent, Fitzgerald suggests that instead of having a common American Dream, society only has a common discontent. Seeking ways to quench such insatiable desires will ultimately lead to moral depravity, suggesting

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