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    The novel “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a tragedy in which true love does not prosper. Fitzgerald’s pencil coursed with the composure of the arm of a composer as it birthed beautiful images to convey concealed connotations. Perhaps the most significant of all the images is the “pyramid of pulpless halves” that appeared as a waste product of one of Gatsby’s fancy fandangos. The image of Gatsby’s trash is comparable to another image of trash found earlier in the novel. “The valley

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    The 1920’s was a time of prosperity‚ World War 1 had just ended and it was a time of recession. After the war‚ everyone wanted to be rich and famous‚ but nobody wanted to work for it. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby was a story that told everyone what it was like during a time where the American Dream was everyone’s goal. The characters in The Great Gatsby all believed they were living the American Dream because they were extremely rich and very popular. Some characters like Tom Buchanan

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    Why The Great Gatsby Is Not so Great In the book The Great Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ why does the main character‚ Jay Gatz‚ claim the title of being great? The Great Gatsby is set in the early 1920’s in New York City in two areas known as East Egg and West Egg. Jay Gatz‚ widely recognized by the name Gatsby‚ lives in West Egg in a mansion where he hosts parties hoping that one day his true love‚ Daisy Buchanan would attend. However‚ Gatsby becomes untrustworthy as he lies to his party

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald has written many books and short stories. One of these pieces of literature is The Great Gatsby. This has been one of his most popular works along with Tender is the Night. The book’s popularity allowed it to be adapted into multiple different films. The theme of The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is the faultiness of humanity‚ and Fitzgerald’s purpose of the novel is to convey that life is not perfect; furthermore‚ this work displays useful lessons for students to learn

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    Emotions can be revealed through all types of literature such as in the novel The Great Gatsby‚ by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ the poem To The Virgins‚ To Make Much of Time‚ by Robert Herrick and in the short story The Yellow Wallpaper‚ by Charlotte Gilman. The most powerful way to connect with an audience is through the characters’ emotions. An emotional connection is created when a reader formulates a conclusion about the characters‚ allowing the interaction to become deep and meaningful. Therefore‚

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    F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ whose fame rests largely upon his novels‚ especially The Great Gatsby (1925)‚ also wrote dozens upon dozens of short stories that literally provided him with his livelihood‚ many of which made their initial appearances in The Saturday Evening Post and Esquire. In total‚ one hundred eighty-one short stories by Fitzgerald‚ both published and unpublished‚ are listed below. Of these‚ one is shared in authorship with Zelda Fitzgerald (her other ten stories are noted also)‚ and another

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    to the above view. The USA in the 1920s is remembered as the ‘Roaring Twenties’‚ an age of new life‚ of hedonism and opportunity following the horrors the Great War. The decade is synonymous with wealth‚ materialism and unprecedented freedom. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby provides an insight into the exciting and prosperous lives of the American people as they embark on the limitless potential of the American Dream and therefore it conveys a picture of 1920s American society. With reference

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    People hold different things to be symbolic. Dove and peace‚ a rose and love; they are all simple things but widely symbolic. In the Great Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ he uses symbolism in the form of his characters and to develop a theme‚ the declination of the American Dream. Another theme that ties into the American Dream is class structure‚ which is demonstrated by the geography in the text. All of the characters are symbolic of different classes in American Society‚ from the richest

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    The Roaring Twenties was a period of frivolous days and exciting nights. Times were prosperous and life was good for most. In The Great Gatsby‚ published in 1925‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald writes about the fictitious life of Jay Gatsby‚ a self-made millionaire (Gross 1). The setting of the novel is New York in the twenties‚ a time‚ and place‚ where people were jovial and carefree. In New York‚ more than anywhere‚ people did not worry about life’s downs‚ but focused on the highlife and partying. Prohibition

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    In the novel‚ “The Great Gatsby”‚ by F Scott Fitzgerald‚ the author wants us to view Nick Caraway as courageous and sticking to his morals. Nick is the narrator of the novel and he has faced many difficult decisions that have tested his moral standing. He seemed to make a morally right decision in all of these instances despite the consequences they could have for him. The hardest decision Nick had to make was to arrange for Daisy‚ his married cousin‚ to meet a long lost love of hers‚ Jay Gatsby

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