Reflection Of The Great Gatsby

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“The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald follows Nick Carraway, a young, educated man from Minnesota, who moves to New York in the summer of 1922 and rents a home in West Egg for the purpose of learning about the bond business. The story narrated by Nick Carraway describes the life of Jay Gatsby, a man who lives his life around his aspiration to be reunited with Daisy Buchanan, the love of his life who he lost five years age. Gatsby’s desire for daisy leads him into the arms of his beloved, and eventually into the arms of death. The story start’s off by introducing Nick as the narrator and pointing him out as unlike the other wealthy inhabitants of West Egg, a wealthy area populated by the new rich, a group who have made their fortune recently and don’t have established social connections and are prone to display their wealth in gaudy ways. Nick was educated at Yale, and had established social connections in East Egg, a wealthy area which also catered to wealthy inhabitants who in contrast to the inhabitants of West Egg had a past of being wealthy. Nick also introduces his cousin, Daisy Buchanan, and her husband, Tom, a classmate of Nick’s at Yale, into the story along with Jordan, a friend of Daisy’s who Nick ends up having a romantic relationship with as he enters East Egg. Not long after meeting them, Nick travels to the Valley of Ashes where he first sees the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg while traveling with Tom to see his mistress, Myrtle Wilson. The story progresses as Nick eventually receives an initiation to one of Gatsby’s infamous parties where he encounters Jordan, and they meet the infamous Gatsby himself, a young man who refers to everyone as “old sport.” Through Gatsby’s friendship with Nick, Gatsby is finally abl... ... middle of paper ... ...which comes at the hand of chapter seven works to prepare the reader for the final two chapters of the book. After Myrtle’s death Wilson starts to develop as more of a character in the story, as Fitzgerald points Wilson out simply to address his lack for material objects and his contradiction to Tom. In addition, Nick’s development as a stronger character allowed him to come out of the chapter in better shape as he had learned more about Daisy, Tom, Jordan, and life. After the accident, Nick’s defiance to enter Tom’s house as he tells the reader, “I’d be damned if I’d go in; I’d had enough of all of them for one day” (150) introduces him as a more independent, and judgmental character. Nick’s opinion towards Tom and Daisy becomes clear, and prepares the reader for Nick’s departure from the West and East Egg as he becomes aware of the lack of morality in the East.

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