Fitzgerald tells the story in chapter 7 via retrospective narration‚ from the perspective of Nick Carraway‚ a self-conscious narrator‚ who is writing a novel of his own‚ within Fitzgerald’s novel. Fitzgerald uses many techniques to tell the story in chapter 7‚ namely pathetic fallacy‚ characterisation and the chronological revelation of the events that took place in the summer of 1922‚ after Gatsby and daisy were finally reunited. Fitzgerald builds on the image of Tom as a “brute.” He is shown
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How does F Scott Fitzgerald tell the story in chapter two of ‘The Great Gatsby’? The introduction of Tom’s mistress‚ Myrtle‚ in Chapter Two of ‘The Great Gatsby’ plays as the focal point of the chapter. It begins with Tom and Nick travelling into New York on the train‚ however they get off in the Valley of Ashes‚ a derelict setting between West Egg‚ East Egg and New York. The pair stop at a mechanics‚ and speak with the man who is married to Myrtle‚ Wilson. Myrtle‚ Tom and Nick then go to their
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ENDURING LOVE – CHAPTERS 3-6 |QUOTATION |Who said this to whom? |LANGUAGE ANALYSIS |THEMATIC links? |ANALYSIS of effect on reader | |“The explosion of |First person narrative |Metaphor: compares idea of violent |●Science concept used for disaster |McEwan uses this image of a violent explosion to compare the balloon incident with
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How does Fitzgerald tell the story in Chapter 4? In the Great Gatsby‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald uses various aspects of narrative to bring the story alive and help the reader become immersed in it. In the duration of the first few chapters the reader is introduced to each of the main characters needed for the story and by Chapter 4 almost all of the plotlines have been opened‚ ready to be explored. Nick is the first-person narrator‚ telling the story in retrospective and we continue to learn more information
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interest and anticipation that will drive the reader to carry on and enjoy it. Readers expect openings to include a couple of key areas like the setting‚ the introduction of characters and interest through a form of enigma or tension. Ian McEwan’s Enduring Love both conforms and challenges what a reader would expect of an opening through opening on what seems to be a climactic point of the book. Opening with the balloon incident immediately creates tension. McEwan’s choice of opening sentence is particularly
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What is significant about the narrative in chapter one? In the opening chapter of Enduring Love‚ the narrative is very important as it helps the reader see the narrator’s opinion of what happened that day leading up to the accident of John Logan’s death. In this chapter‚ there is mainly a use of interior monologue to describe the events as the narrator is using first person to describe what was happening and is verbalising their thoughts as they occurred. This type of narrative is a good
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Write about some of the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in chapter 1 The chapter begins with Nick Carraway introducing himself as the narrator. Fitzgerald uses a first-person retrospective narrative‚ therefore we are given Nicks point of view throughout. The chapter begins with Nick remembering his father’s advice that “all people in this world haven’t had the advantages that [he’s] had” this tells the reader that the main theme of the novel is wealth. The use of the word “advantages” suggests that
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sort of misreading as does the novel’s narrator: this narrator’s misreading causes Turner and Tallis great suffering‚ and the misreading by readers of Atonement “causes” these characters’ deaths. Reinforcing McEwan’s warning against misreading‚ then‚ is the novel’s illustration of how easy it is to misread. Keywords: implied author‚ Kenneth Burke‚ misreading‚ Wayne Booth ecause of the sinister characters and plots of his early novels and short stories‚ the English writer Ian McEwan has been called by
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Book review: Enduring love‚ by Ian McEwen Plot: The basic story line to the book is all about a man who experiences a ballooning accident where he and a group of other guys try to pull down a balloon that has a boy in‚ which is the captain of the air balloons grandson...so they are all holding it down trying to get the kid out but a strong gust of wind blows the balloon up and the four guys still holding on are pulled up with it but before it gets too high three of the four jump off to safety
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How do Tennessee Williams and Ian McEwan present masculinity and Femininity as major themes in ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ and ‘Enduring Love’? Masculinity and femininity are defined as a set of qualities‚ characteristics or roles generally considered typical of‚ or appropriate to‚ a man or woman respectively [1]. Both the novel ‘Enduring Love’ (1997) and the Play ‘A Streetcar Named Desire’ (1947) presents masculinity and femininity but in different ways and era’s. McEwan presents these two major
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