How Does Fitzgerald Use Color In The Great Gatsby

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Color is an essential part of everyday life and the world around us. Colors convey meaning when words cannot. In The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald uses color as a literary device to progress the story, create setting, mood, and develop and develop characters. Fitzgerald’s use of color shows the differences in class by describing the character, their surroundings, and their possessions with color.
Fitzgerald uses color to differentiate the social classes of the by describing them with color. In The Great Gatsby Nick states that Daisy is the “Golden Girl…” (120). this description of Daisy shows that she is a girl of money and status because gold has a symbolic meaning of money and wealth. On the other hand Fitzgerald describes the man selling Airedales to Tom as a “Gray old man” (27). Basically what Fitzgerald is suggesting is that the man selling Airedales is a man of a low social status because gray symbolizes depression, and the man is trying to find a way to make money so he can climb the social ladder. …show more content…

In chapter two Nick states The Valley of Ashes is a “Gray land and they have splashes of bleak dust which drift endlessly over it” (23). Nick is basically trying to say that the valley of Ashes has an atmosphere that is gray which of the symbolic meaning of lifelessness which the poor have for they have not achieved their American dream, therefore they are not living. On the contrary Nick states that “The white palaces of the fashionable East Side glittered along the water” (5). Nick is saying that the Mansions of the east side are a “glimmering white” this means that whoever lives in those houses are rich because glittering white has symbolic meaning of wealth. The significance of the use of color is in the setting is that it gives the setting of Greater meaning and in this case it shows what kind of people live in the

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