number of interesting ways, including through the use of symbolism. The most significant symbol in The Great Gatsby is the green light that is at the end of Daisy’s dock, which symbolizes Gatsby’s hope, Daisy. The green light is shown consecutively throughout the entire novel, beginning, middle, and end. This is shown in the beginning when Nick first sees Gatsby and the green light. In the middle, Gatsby is talking to Daisy about how he always
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Deception The story Macbeth was written by none other than William Shakespeare himself. There was many forms of deception in this story. The son did not care what he was doing to his father or his family. There are many messages throughout this whole story. Throughout the story the boy loses all ten million dollars that his father gave him, he ended up living in the streets for a while with no food or anything. He decided that it would be a good idea to go back to his house with his father and older
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The status of an outsider is regularly bestowed upon an individual who has been severely affected by their environmental influences thus causing them to refuse to conform to the ideologies of society. The Catcher in the Rye (TCITR) by J.D Salinger and The Chrysanthemums by John Steinbeck are both examples of texts that exemplify this notion of the outsider. In TCITR, the protagonist Holden Caulfield is exposed to numerous environmental influences which have a dramatic effect, ultimately leading
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struggle of Kayla Montgomery, who faces a currently incurable disease called multiple sclerosis or MS that causes her legs to go numb. Despite this, she still runs for her school’s track and cross-country teams. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Gatsby chases after his love interest, Daisy, and lives under the illusion that she will leave her husband for him. The novel revolves around his life, concluding in his tragic death. Rob Reiner’s The Princess Bride plays on the idea of true love
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and The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, are two novels about the lost generation. They are striving to find an order for their world, a world that has been shattered. They attempt to reach their allotment dream, and the downfall of those who attempt to reach its imaginary goals. Not only are the themes of these two novels similar, but the characters within the novels have many similarities. An example of two characters that are similar would be Jay Gatsby, from the novel The Great Gatsby and Robert
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World of The Great Gatsby In the novel The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald utilizes colour symbolism to enhance each character’s personality flaws and convey a symbolic meaning behind everything the characters do. Throughout the novel, the colours that highlight these flaws are Green, Yellow, White, and Silver. Each colour conveys important symbolic meanings, which ultimately highlight each character’s tainted personalities. Fitzgerald magnifies these clearly identifiable flaws in Gatsby, Daisy, and
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From a feminist lens, The Great Gatsby criticizes and punishes female characters more than their male counterparts. F. Scott Fitzgerald best exemplifies this disparity through the characterization of Myrtle Wilson. Myrtle is criticized and cosmically punished for taking part in an affair with Tom Buchanan, while Tom walks away unscathed. Tom Buchanan is praised for his sexuality, while Myrtle is criticized and punished for her sexual nature. George Wilson, Myrtle’s husband, evokes sympathy from the
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From luxury mansions to lavish parties, the Great Gatsby fails to disappoint one’s imagination of the perks packaged with the life of the upper class. Though the novel paints an image of ecstasy when vividly describing rich scenery; with great intent, Fitzgerald shines a light on the struggle to feel powerful and content in their own several characters . Though Fitzgerald highlights a plethora of realities through a variety of fictional characters, a parallel can drawn between the themes presented
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The Great Gatsby’s main theme is definitely the American dream. American Dream is loosely based on the concept of a home, family, and a car. Success, and wealth combine to create an alter ego for the wealthy, and the less fortunate are just neglected. Fitzgerald clearly uses satire to critique chasing the American Dream, because in the end it’s just a dream. This “dream” is the motives behind what Gatsby does, and the same motives that ended him. Gatsby can often be signified for his “colossal
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but they can also be our downfall. Separately, these traits harbor great potential, but together they can lead to desperation and chasing after unrequited love. Relationships are the greatest example of this, specifically the relationship between Gatsby and Daisy. He spent his whole life stumbling after a girl who enticed him with the merest hint of love, yet fell short when it mattered most. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, the unwillingness to let go of his feeling for Daisy was the real
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