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    In the book The Great Gatsby written by F. Scott Fitzgerald‚ the character James Gatz‚ also known as Gatsby plays a very important role in the book. Throughout the story he reveals his true self to someone he barely knows and makes a friendship and new experiences after being hidden for a while. Gatsby in the beginning of the book was unnoticed. No one really knew who he was as a person or if he was alive or dead‚ but that’s what makes him so spontaneous. Gatsby is always ready for an adventure

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    Beautiful Fools and Army Men F. Scott Fitzgerald is not that good of a writer. The Great Gatsby is suppose to be this great book‚ but that is not so. His ideas were not even original. He just took his life and his wife’s life‚ exaggerated it and added affairs‚ then published it. Anyone can do that. Daisy Buchanan life is basically Zelda’s life‚ but amped up. “Daisy began to move again with the season; suddenly she was again keeping half a dozen dates a day with half a dozen men…” Daisy‚ like Zelda

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    of The Great Gatsby (Draft) Can money buy happiness? This age old question is a recurring theme in the novel The Great Gatsby. Throughout the novel we see that wealth creates loneliness‚ isolation and corruption in people. Through the examination of the main character’s behaviours present in The Great Gatsby‚ it is clear that wealth negatively impacts people. First of all‚ Gatsby’s amount of wealth causes him to be isolated from others. Nick observes this when “.. [his] eyes fell on Gatsby‚ standing

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    The Great Gatsby‚ written in 1925 by Francis Scott Fitzgerald‚ was a tale of the gilded East Coast of America in the wild decade known by “The Roaring 20s”. From the Wealthiest of Nobles to the Lowest of Peasants‚ The Great Gatsby highlights the differences between the proletariat and the blessed bourgeoisie‚ having come to riches through means of simple inheritance. Every identity of the character as the bourgeoisie or the proletariat are shown in definite form; the rich emanate a careless aura

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    December 13‚ 2013 Wealth is Not Always Great Money has always had an effect on people‚ throughout history people have always strived to achieve wealth. However being rich and wealthy is not all about money‚ it is about being happy. In the The Great Gatsby happiness is bought because the characters living in East and West Egg have an absurd amount of money. F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays the lifestyle and behavior of wealthy individuals in The Great Gatsby‚ illuminating the corrupting power money

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    Kamryn Green Wealth‚ Power‚ and Morality in The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby‚ by F. Scott Fitzgerald focuses on the wealthy class that live in New York‚ and takes place during the “Roaring Twenties”‚ and era of economic prosper and recklessness after World War I. Fitzgerald highlights the irresponsibility and lack of morality that derives from wealth. Throughout the novel‚ there are a number of characters that abuse their wealth or power in a way to excuse their moral irresponsibility. Through

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    Gatsby is a young man who born in a backcountry‚ he suffered bitterness of life when he was a child. Affected by the Franklin’s road which leads to success‚ he is ambitious and yearning money and social status‚ he is a typical chaser of American Dream. But he is unable to change the poor living conditions‚ therefore he can not stop struggling between illusion and reality. At that time‚ the United States advocating the supremacy of money and hedonism‚ Gatsby believe that as long as get material prosperity

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    Gatsby Essay In the 1920s the time when “The Great Gatsby” story is told‚ in that time there was prohibition for alcoholic beverages. It was a nationwide ban on the sale‚ production‚ import‚ and transport of alcohol. The effects of that ban‚ were that people would still buy alcohol just in secret places where they brought illegal alcohol or places‚ that for example in the novel we have the explanation how Gatsby got his fortune. He worked with Wolfsheim‚ an illegal alcohol seller. In fact‚ alcohol

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    narrator‚ both reference the role of judgment and conscience in human nature throughout the novel‚ especially in Chapter Seven. In this chapter‚ Tom finds out the true nature of Gatsby and Daisy’s relationship. When Tom and Gatsby are arguing over Daisy‚ Tom reveals to Gatsby and Daisy that he has investigated Gatsby’s past and his mysterious business practices. Tom has had his suspicions about Gatsby and Daisy‚ but does not seem too worried about Daisy leaving him for Gatsby‚ sending the two of them

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    appliances and loose morals that reincarnated the ‘American Dream’ to comprise much more than its original pledge for ‘life‚ liberty and the pursuit of land’. Fitzgerald’s infamous stance on the American Dream thematically appears throughout ‘The Great Gatsby’ where a tactful succession of language and characterisation critiques America’s supposed illusory nature of wealth. Ironically‚ as cousin to the author of the ‘Star Spangled Banner’‚ Fitzgerald’s views followed a far less patriotic route‚ on one

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