Positive Connotation In The Great Gatsby

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As a reader, it’s not typical to question the reliability of the narrator. But how would the story change if the narrator recounted events with complete neutrality? In the novel The Great Gastby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, writes the narrator as Nick Carraway, a stockbroker who recently moved from the Midwest to the West Egg of New York. Nick recounts the story between him, the prestigious residents of the East Egg, and the mysterious Jay Gatsby. Carraway introduces himself as a passive, nonjudgmental person; he views the world with no lens, “I’m inclined to reserve all judgments…” going as far to say that he will do anything to avoid conflict, “Frequently I have feigned sleep, preoccupation, or a hostile levity when I realized by some unmistakable …show more content…

Nick compares himself to a “casual watcher in the darkening streets” (Fitzgerald 35), reminding the reader that he is impersonal, and, “I am one of the few honest people that I have ever known” (Fitzgerald 59). Although Nick persistently defends his character as a spectator, it’s clear Nick is desperate to demonstrate the outlook of events based on his point-of-view.
Presuming that the narration in The Great Gatsby is valid is naïve. Nick uses positive connotation to describe Gatsby and has a negative attitude towards nearly every other character in the novel. Nick describes Gatsby using positive adjectives; even before Gatsby’s character is established, Nick describes Gatsby as, “gorgeous” (Fitzgerald 2), further typifying Nick’s non-objectivity towards Gatsby. “Yet the limitations of Nick’s character do have narrative consequences, for Nick sometimes sees only part of the meaning hat a scene carries… sometimes even strains ‘judgments’ out of inconclusive evidence” (Cartwright). While these subtle adjectives go unnoticed by the reader, they give a subconscious outlook; before the reader has a chance to form an opinion of the characters, Nick uses adjectives and tones to …show more content…

Contrary to the descriptive words used for Gatsby, Nick’ resentment towards the characters that mistreated Gatsby is notable; he is constantly using words like, violent, large, unintelligent, and superficial to describe Tom.

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