"Arnold Rothstein" Essays and Research Papers

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    Gatsby’s Fairy Lover The events in the Novel‚ the Great Gatsby‚ written by F. Scott Fitzgarald‚ can be closely related to the love stories found in fairytales. Every fairytale needs a struggling hero who finally meets success‚ a distressed heroine who discovers happiness‚ and a villain to create conflict. Obvious to the reader‚ our hero is Gatsby‚ the damsel is Daisy‚ and Tom is the villain. Gatsby’s initial circumstances compared to his thunderous success and finally the great tragedy he faces

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    The roaring twenties truly were roaring with the lavish‚ extravagant lifestyle of parties and immorality. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald attributes to this lifestyle. In the novel‚ the narrator Nick Carraway moves to Long Island and develops relationships with Jay Gatsby and Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Fitting perfectly with the theme of the twenties‚ Tom Buchanan has a woman on the side named Myrtle Wilson. Soon after‚ the reader is informed that Gatsby had a former relationship with Daisy

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    The novel‚ The Great Gatsby‚ by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ is about the American Dream‚ an idealistic and illusionary goal to achieve wealth and status. The ruthless pursuit of wealth leads to the corruption of human nature and moral values. Fitzgerald uses characters in the novel to show the corruptions and the illusionary nature of the American Dream. The superficial achievement of the American Dreams give no fulfillment‚ no real joy and peace; but instead‚ creates lots of problems for the characters

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    The Great Gatsby Theme

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    The Great Gatsby explores a number of themes‚ none is more prevalent than that of the corruption of the American dream. The American dream is the concept that‚ in America‚ any person can be successful as long he or she is prepared to work hard and use their natural gifts. Gatsby appears to be the embodiment of this dream—he has risen from being a poor farm boy with no prospects to being rich‚ having a big house‚ servants‚ and a large social circle attending his numerous functions. He has achieved

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    West meets East... and Doesn’t Like it. The novel The Great Gatsby is an interesting tale of two cities really. Nick Carraway; the narrator‚ represents all that is good an wholesome in the great midwest. He is a well-educated man who aspires to be a bond broker. His character is conflicted internally and externally throughout the novel but really culminates into a loathing for all things eastern. Carraway’s farmboy charm and doe-eyed innocence is put to the test when he meets The Great Jay

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    TOM Tom thinks of Gatsby as a “home wrecker” and a criminal. He cannot see any of Gatby’s virtues‚ but rather focuses on and exaggerates his questionable behavior (pursuing Daisy and bootlegging). Nick‚ on the other hand‚ sees both Gatsby’s virtues and faults and presents them to the reader from a neutral point of view. “Who is Gatsby anyhow?” demanded Tom suddenly.”Some big bootlegger?” (PG 104) • This quote reveals Tom’s suspicions of Gatsby’s wealth. Even though Tom doesn’t know that Gatsby

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    The Great Gatsby I: All throughout grade school and even high school‚ my teachers‚ parents‚ and even friends told me not to take the easy way out when it comes to books. Always read the book before the movie. I usually took the easy way out‚ watched the movie‚ and then skim the book. After doing this project I see what everyone was talking about. The book is much better than the movie‚ it gives you more of a sense of what is going on‚ a greater sense of when the story takes place‚ and it gives the

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    A novel is a form of entertainment‚ but is can also be so much more. Literature does not just provide entertainment but an insight into the culture and humanity of the society that it was written in. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is an entertaining story that is set in the 1920’s. It is about a man who is trying to rekindle his relationship that he had with his former lover‚ who is now married. However the reader may learn a great deal about the lifestyle of the 1920’s‚ because it portrays

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    Novelist Edith Wharton wrote her defining work‚ 1905’s the House of Mirth‚ on a subject she knew all too well: the style-over-substance realm of New York’s upper-crust society during the Gilded Age. Having been raised in this "fashionable" society‚ Wharton knew both its intricacies and cruelties firsthand. The triumphant rise and tragic fall of protagonist Lily Bart demonstrate both the "sunshine and shadow" of the Gilded Age. The House of Mirth not only exposes the reality of how "the other

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    The Great Gatsby Analysis

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    Diction: In the Great Gatsby‚ Fitzgerald utilizes a heavily elegant and sometimes superfluous diction which reflects the high class society that the reader is introduced to within the novel. The speaker Nick Carraway talks directly to the reader. The diction is extensively formal throughout the novel using high blown language the borders on being bombastic. An example of this formal language is seen when Nick states‚"The truth was that Jay Gatsby‚ of West Egg‚ Long Island‚ sprang from his Platonic

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