From realistic fiction books to fantasy books, my favorite book was The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Long Island was split into two world, West Egg, which was the domicile of those rich through hard work, and East Egg, where the residents were rich by inheritance. In the realistic fiction book, West Egg was home to Jay Gatsby, who made his fortune through selling liquor, which was illegal. West Egg also was home to one of the less fashionable fellows of Long Island, Nick Carraway. Nick Carraway did not live in house imitations of Hôtel de Ville of Normandy, Nick settled for what he could afford, a home on the Sound for $80.00 a month. East Egg was the residence of the Buchanan’s, Daisy, and Tom, and temporarily Jordan Baker,
The East and West Egg reflect Tom and Daisy’s presiding class dominance. Fitzgerald first introduces the places where the main characters Gatsby, Tom, and Daisy live by describing them as “a pair of enormous eggs, identical in contour and separated only by a courtesy bay” (5). Already Fitzgerald gives the idea that these eggs have very similar features but are somehow different through his word choice of “identical” and “separated”. Fitzgerald places Gatsby on the West Egg and Tom on the East egg. They are “identical” in wealth but “separated” by class.
When Nick visits the Buchanan’s house in “East Egg”, Jordan and Daisy, his “second cousin once removed,” are “both in white,” Daisy also once had “a little white roadster,” and a “white face.” She is surrounded by white to represent innocence. She met Gatsby when “she was just eighteen” at Camp Taylor and she was “by far the most popular of all the young girls in Louisville.” She married “Tom Buchanan of Chicago” because Gatsby was poverty stricken at the time and Tom “had more pomp and circumstance than Louisville ever knew.” Daisy shows attachment to money and material items when she visits Gatsby and his new found wealth, by crying over his shirts because they are “such beautiful shirts.”
“The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald This book takes place in New York City sometime in 1920. The main character is Nick Carraway or some people think it's Jay Gatsby. Gatsby is in love with a girl named Daisy they were involved years before in the army but after the war, Gatsby disappears until he gets money and buys the house right across the bay from Daisy's house. Daisy is married to an enraged man, who is having an affair with a woman named Myrtle.
Tom of East Egg was married to the wealthy Daisy, but was having an affair with Myrtle, a woman of a lower social class. “Toms got some lady in New York” (Fitzgerald 15). Daisy began to have an affair with the affluent Jay Gatsby of West Egg. When Tom discovered this affair, he did not set after his wife, instead he would “...like to know who he is and what he does” (108). Tom, who was trying to confront Gatsby, suggested that after lunch they all head into town.
Nick’s American Dream was the opposite of Gatsby’s; he always strived to see and do new things every day, constantly reaching for the future, while Gatsby only wanted to relive his past with Daisy. Once Nick feels like there is nothing left for him to discover in New York, he moves back west to rediscover the lost excitement after Gatsby’s death. Nick also believed that Gatsby was foolish in his American Dream because it was unattainable. Nick uses imagery to illustrate the appeal of West Egg before Gatsby’s death, describing the illusions of “those gleaming, dazzling parties”, stating that he could “still hear the music and the laughter, faint and incessant” (Fitzgerald 179).
Daisy Buchanan is one of several characters in the book The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Daisy is a cousin of the character Nick Carraway, whose point of view the entire book is written in. She comes from old money, and her husband, Tom Buchanan, is also rich. The Buchanan’s lived in Chicago for a time, before they moved to the East Egg, where all the old money lived, rather than the East egg. The East Egg was the poorer side of town, or housed people who were rich, but were new money; such as Jay Gatsby.
Shyanna Alspaugh Mrs. Smith English 11 13 May 2015 Great Gatsby An island outside of New York were two sides, East and West Egg . In the island, were characters that shared different morals and did things a lot different from one another. These characters were known as Nick, Daisy, Gatsby, and Tom. In this story different themes were displayed some of these themes include the following lies and betrayal, social class and money, and love and marriage.
The Symbolism in the Novel the Great Gatsby The symbolism of setting expressed by Fitzgerald in the novel The Great Gatsby adds important values to the story. Fitzgerald creates a plot of love, money, society, and success mixed together to show us the values he learned himself. He describes how the dreams of a character relates to understanding the influence of power. There are three main settings: The East Egg, The West Egg, and The valley of Ashes.
West Egg, NEW YORK - Jay Gatsby, age 33, came to a woeful death on September 1, 1922, in his lavish Long Island home. While bathing in the garden’s swimming pool, an alleged George Wilson unexpectedly came up and shot Gatsby from behind then turned the gun on himself. ____________________________________ “Gatsby, he had a grand vision for his life since he was a boy.
F Scott Fitzgerald's “The Great Gatsby” is a fiction tragedy book that portrays the character Nick Carraway and his interactions with the famous millionaire Jay Gatsby. The significance of the cover is how this book tells its story. It depicts two female eyes and bright red lips hovering ominously above a bright skyline. The cover is important to the story because it shows symbolism of everything always being watched.
After reading the scene about Nick leaving West Egg for the last time in "The Great Gatsby" made me think about leaving everything behind and how it impacts life. For example, in chapter 9 at the end of page 79, Nick said "His protest continued in his head, Look here old sport, you've got to find someone for me. You've got to try hard. I can't go through this alone." This shows that Nick couldn't stop thinking about how Gatsby's words were running through his head.
Location and Symbolism in The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald contains many examples of symbolism. One of the most common symbols that appears is regarding location of important areas in the novel. The location of the Valley of Ashes provides central and very important symbols; including Dr. T. J. Eckleburg, the valley itself, the valley and religious connections, and the fact that George Wilson lives there. Dr. T. J. Eckleburg is actually a picture of a man’s face on a billboard located in the valley of ashes.
East Egg symbolizes the classy, upscale, always-had-money type of families. The Buchanan’s are an example of this, they
I. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, the American Dream is depicted as a mirage due to its ultimate lack of fulfillment, outsider’s inability to obtain it, and the corruption it causes. A. Those who have achieved their idea of the American Dream are ultimately unfulfilled emotionally even though they possess tremendous wealth. B. The American Dream is a mirage, and thus unattainable as it limits success of an individual by their class and ethnic origin. C. Not only is the American Dream exclusive and unfulfilling, but it also causes corruption as those who strive for the American Dream corrupt themselves in doing so and the old rich hide behind their wealth in order to conceal their immoralities.
“Man is the only animal for whom his own existence is a problem which he has to solve” By Erich From To my own understanding, man is its own enemy but to elaborate more. This speaks of the human-environment relationship which deals with the studies of how the behaviour and influence of both, the environment and human have on each other. But, that us humans actually are the cause of our ‘’situation’’. This will form a clear direction and structure for the essay in the analysing of The Great Gatsby. With the research I have sourced I will be analysing how the environment isn’t necessarily the cause of human behaviour at times but that humans can manipulate the environment to suite their behaviour or cause the environment to react, in the relation