165 Results for the great gatsby

The Great Gatsby Why did Daisy choose Tom in the end??? In the novel "The Great Gatsby", Daisy Buchanan was faced with an enormous decision. She had to choose between Tom; her husband and Jay Gatsby; her lover. Gatsby seemed to be the ideal man of his time. Fabulously wealthy, handsome, charismat...
Disturbing Things in The Great Gatsby Throughout The Great Gatsby there are many disturbing instances, events, and people. These disturbing things put a lot into perspective such as an individual person's character and the character of society at the time. The...
The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is about the life of a rich man and his success and search for love. Daisy, Tom, and Gatsby are the main characters of the Great Gatsby and they are the ones who express the most attitudes. The story was good at describing the characters at...
A dream is defined in the Webster's New World Dictionary as: a fanciful vision of the conscious mind; a fond hope or aspiration; anything so lovely, transitory, etc. as to seem dreamlike. In the beginning pages of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway, the narrator of the ...
The Success and Failure of the American Dream in SocietyMany Characters in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald display the life of the roaring 20's. Gatsby's whole life is spent trying to achieve money and status so that he can reach a certain position in life. He works hard in an illegal way to...
The Great Who? How can someone hate a person, and at the same time think that they are great? Nick Carraway, in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, demonstrates this abnormal reaction once acquainted with Jay Gatsby. Nick has the uncommon ability of seeing through the immorality that ...
The Great GatsbyThe protagonist in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby is Jay Gatsby. He is the one that gives the name to the book. The central character is Mr. Gatsby. However, Nick Carraway opens the novel as the narrator. He is involved in all events throughout the novel, yet he does not ...
Often times in literature, as well as in life, dreams and hopes do not follow through the way they are preferred to. Instead of leaving characters fulfilled and content as they had dreamt of, they are bereft of their wishes and dispirited. This applies to the main character in the novel The Great G...
Texts are a product of the cultural context in which they are produced, therefore they often present a critique of that society's moral and social values. Texts of a certain era will frequently reflect the moral and social values of the time. The Great Gatsby was penned in America in the Jazz Age,...
F. Scott Fitzgerald's book, The Great Gatsby, illustrates the carelessness of many high-class people in the 1920's. Gatsby dedicated his life to a woman whose shallowness made it impossible for her to measure up to his ideals. Gatsby's illusion of his feelings for Daisy was t...
THE GREAT GATSBY The American Dream is in my opinion the ideals set by families in America to achieve goals that are generally unrealistic to achieve. An example would be the picture of a wealthy middle class family with two children, one boy and one girl, with a dog and a ca...
In The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, an extremely wealthy man lives in a town called West Egg. Right next to Gatsby's town lies East Egg, where most of its people have inherited all their money and riches and are very arrogant. The story is told through Nick who judges people th...
The Great Gatsby is about the American Society at its worst and the downfall of those who attempt to reach its unachievable goals. It is through this idea of the corruption of American Society that F. Scott Fitzgerald became so successful in this novel. The novel, The Great Gatsby incorporates perpl...
Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby, is based on the dreams of a man named Jay Gatsby. Throughout the novel, it is suggested to the reader that Gatsby is a symbol for America. He represents the possibilities of life on a level at which the material and the spiritual have been confused (Bewle...
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby struggles with his own American dream. The American dream is to start out poor and isolated and make your way up to the top of the financial and social pyramids, to achieve wealth in excess, and to be able to have whatever you want by...
The theme of F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby is the "withering of the American Dream." The original American Dream held out the promise of endless opportunities, individualism, and progress. Believing in this idea, Jay Gatsby invests his entire life into a single dream: The revival of a past...
The Great Gatsby: The Façade and Realities of Sight Sight is such an important sense to our everyday livings; not only to how we survive, but how we judge; the fronts we are meant to see, and the realities we are not. To see is to know the absolute truth, but to missee is to have the allusi...
The American DreamSuccess, wealth, and happiness are all important aspects of a person's life. In F. Scott Fitzgerald's, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby, the title character devotes his life to living the American Dream. The American Dream to Gatsby is maintaining wealth, being successful, and trying...
The Great Gatsby There are several colors used for symbolism in the novel, The Great Gatsby written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The following five colors: green, white, blue, gray and yellow are just a few that Fitzgerald uses cleverly for symbolism. The first color green is used the...
In The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald presents a specific portrait of American society during the roaring twenties and tells the story of a man who rises from the gutter to great riches. This man, Jay Gatsby, does not realize that his new wealth cannot give him the privileges of class and status...
Great Gatsby In the novel, The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, many significant events lead you to compare and contrast. The main character, Gatsby, has an ultimate dream of dating Daisy Buchanan. Tom, Daisy's husband, is the type of guy who is much more careless and already has the A...
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a 172-page fiction. It is written about a man named Nick Carraway and his adventures with an eccentric neighbour named Jay Gatsby. The story is told from Nick's viewpoint of the irregular circumstances that went on over the time that they knew each other....
"Disillusion, The New Illusion" In The Great Gatsby, WWI had previously ended a few years earlier in 1918, Nick was among the generation of Americans coming home from a brutal carnage that would make early twentieth century American seem like an empty hyprocracy. Gatsby's dream o...
Many symbols are incorporated throughout F. Scott Fitzgerald's masterpiece The Great Gatsby. As the story begins, these symbols are slowly introduced and start to show meaning as the story progresses. The characters Nick, Gatsby, Daisy, Pam, Tom, Jordan, Myrtle, and Wilson all give these sym...
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, there is a great deal of symbolism throughout the novel. Fitzgerald uses many elements of scenery and actions to symbolize different aspects of life. For example He uses the green light on the end of Daisy's dock as a symbol of hope for Gatsby. Fitzgerald a...