The Great Gatsby Moral Decay Essay

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    Jazz age. Many influences to his writing came from his own personal life and the world he saw around him. His wife, Zelda, was one of the major influences seen within many of his works. Fitzgerald encompasses many of these things in his books The Great Gatsby and Tender is the night. Letting his own life experiences and insight guide his writing, Fitzgerald explores the effect of social hierarchy on society amidst the Roaring Twenties through his use of evocative, colorful imagery and eloquent use of

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    The Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald When many of us hear about the long awaited American dream, we think of working really hard in the United States and succeeding to provide a good life for ourselfs and or family. The ulitimate goal is to be truly happy with ones life. That is the longed for American dream. At least this is what comes to my mind as an immigrant from Mexico. In the novel “The Great Gatsby” by Scott Fitzgerald he demonstrates failure of the American dream in a number of ways. The

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    The False Reality of the American Dream in the Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a novel that has a large focus on the ideas of the American Dream and social class in the 1920s. In the novel, the people of West Egg and East Egg are people of the upper who have earned money either through inheritance or working hard and have had many opportunities to make their American Dream a reality. The people of the Valley of Ashes are people of lower class who have little to no money and

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    develop a deep understanding of how the context impacts upon the purpose of the texts and the writers intended discourses. The comparative study of Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s sonnets of the Portuguese and Scott Fitzgerald’s Pros fiction ‘The Great Gatsby’ allow for a thorough evaluation of the relationship between the texts contexts and values. Both composers craft arguments on the nature of and value of life itself within the framework of love and spirituality. Browning, however writes from the

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    The American Dream is one of the most prevalent themes throughout The Great Gatsby. Reviewing the long span of literature, it is almost impossible to escape this topic. Through research, it is found that the idea of the American Dream is constantly changing and redefining itself. The transition of this idea from one time period to another, and from one protagonist to the next is an intriguing journey. The American Dream has affected society and is something that most people aspire to achieve. It

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    better understanding of Materialism in the novel The Great Gatsby, by the American writer Francis Scott Fitzgerald. According to Russel W. Belk, Materialism is defined as “the importance a consumer attaches to worldly possessions” (265). At the highest levels, “such possessions assume a central place in a person’s life and are believed to provide the greatest sources of satisfaction and dissatisfaction” (265). The novel questions the importance of great wealth and material excess as factors in supporting

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    Natalia Spritzer Great Gatsby Essay Responding to Literature Final Draft The colored tragedies and endings The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is one of the most recognized American novels. The love-story relates and molds itself into the prominent era of Prohibition, and bases itself off the drunken and impetus glory of the American culture. Fitzgerald’s writing plays with the complex and intricate meaning; his magnificent descriptions, metaphors, and character development beam through the

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    class, life was a struggle, but there was always hope that one could work his way up to the upper class. Jay Gatsby in the Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald had tremendous faith in this belief, known at the American Dream. Through his relentless quest for Daisy Buchanan, his luxurious parties and extravagant displays of wealth, and his friend Nick Carraway’s similar pursuit of wealth, Jay Gatsby, and the newly wealthy populous of West Egg

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    The Great Gatsby is structured into three distinct sections. The first section is chapters one to four which revolve around Nick’s view of past events involving Jay Gatsby, Daisy and Tom Buchanan and their friends. Chapter five is the the pivotal point in the novel as it is when Daisy and Gatsby meet again after many years and it deals with their awkward encounter which reveals what has happened to them since they last met. The final section from chapters six to nine is concerned with Gatsby’s fall

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    Fitzgerald's Great Gatsby and the 20s After a time of prosperity, the roaring 1920’s became a decade of social decay and declining moral values. The forces this erosion of ethics can be explained by a variety of theories. However, F. Scott Fitzgerald paints a convincing portrait of waning social virtue in his novel, The Great Gatsby. Fitzgerald portrays the nefarious effects of materialism created by the wealth-driven culture of the time. This was an era where societal values made wealth and

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