The Role Of Nick Carraway In The Great Gatsby

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The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a masterpiece that defines the 1920s because of his incorporations of major themes including the corruption of the American dream and morality. Through the eyes of the narrator, Nick Carraway, he appears to be an honest spectator who is observing the events of the plot and the climax in the novel. Nick’s social connection with the characters allows him to give readers a sense of morality, allowing Nick to be the moral character in The Great Gatsby. Nick’s moral character is significant because it sets him apart from other characters, allows the reader to trust his perception of the events, and allows Nick to make his final judgements. Nick Carraway comes from the Middle West state of Minnesota as …show more content…

The awareness of this privilege has made Nick tolerant when he encounters lower moral standards in others, and in tolerance, in turn, made him the recipient of many strange coincidences (Way 107). Nick Carraway being brought up from a good family has influence his moral standpoint in The Great Gatsby; however, Nick has to engage in conversations with those who aren’t as moral as him. He comes from a different family background with great morals compared to those he surrounds himself with like Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Nick having to listen to those who are different and don’t have ideal morals sets him apart from everyone else in the novel. Indeed, Nick’s upbringing is different, but his confiding of honesty to the audience assures readers to trust his perception of …show more content…

‘Whenever you feel like criticizing any one,’ he told me ‘just remember that all the people in the world haven’t had the advantages you’ve had’” (Fitzgerald 1). Nick reserves his judgments for others until the end of novel so that his moral standards doesn’t restrict Nick’s relations with the other characters. Nick acknowledges that he “one of the few honest people that [he has] ever known” (Fitzgerald 59). Nick considering himself as an honest person helps the readers to recognize the truth. Critic Michael Wyly states that “indeed it is because of Carraway’s self-professed honesty that he is able to narrate convincingly the adventures and misadventures of The Great Gatsby as the reader is able to believe and identify with him; it is his honest tolerance that makes him the ideal narrator” (77-78). Nick’s confiding his honesty to the audience shows that he’s “more honest than anyone else, [serving] as ‘a guide, a pathfinder, an original settler.’ Frequently obtruding with judgments on characters and general observation on society, Nick provides the perspective through which the issues are apparent” (Gindin 115). Tom, Daisy, Gatsby and others go through a great deal of issues from money

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