Tuesday, May 28, 2019
F. Scott Fitzgeraldââ¬â¢s The Great Gatsby - The Dynamic Gatsby :: Great Gatsby Essays
The Dynamic Gatsby The Great Gatsby is a book filled with dynamic characters, written by a dynamic person. Throughout the book, the themes and situations are on numerous symbolic levels. The Great Gatsby is such a novel, that the hero is portrayed to the reader by a man who, with seemingly no effort, will not think a man easily. He perceives him, takes him in, and analyzes him. This mans name is not, in fact, Gatsby, but Nick Carraway, the narrator of the story. The man who is being perceived, of course, is Jay Gatsby, our hero. Our story, The Great Gatsby, starts out when Nick, a stock trader, moves to West Egg. West Egg is a part of Long Island where the new rich people live. New rich is a term apply to describe people who have recently acquired their wealth, and have no connections in East Egg, where the people who have established their wealth live. Gatsby befriends Nick for a beloved reason, to meet his long lost love, Daisy, Nicks cousin and resident of East Egg. Unfortunat ely for Gatsby, Daisy is married to Tom, a boisterous man who has taken in a mistress and everyone in the novel knows about it. Throughout the novel, Nick acts as Gatsbys confidant. A confidant is a person present when a hero needs someone to listen to his plight. We get to know Gatsby, even though he is bad because of the illegal liquor bootlegging operation he runs. We get to know Gatsby because we like the confidant. If Nick, the confidant, is Gatsbys friend, then Gatsby will be our friend as well. This is true of all relationships that deal with Nick. For the most part, we will timber the same way towards a character as Nick does. The novel ends in explosion and uproar. Nick, knowing Gatsbys passion for Daisy, gets the two together for tea. They kindle their lost love for each other, and, for a long time, they concealed their love for each other from Tom, Daisys husband.
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