Figurative Language In The Great Gatsby

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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a novel filled with symbolism, conflicts, figurative language, and a wide variety of vocabulary. The novel is told in the point of view of one of the main characters, Nick Carraway. Nick is an honest man who never lies (quote?) and tells the story of his neighbor, Jay Gatsby, and the many intertwined events that occurred during the summer that Nick lived in West Egg. The symbolism in The Great Gatsby is important to the main story despite how infinitesimal the detail may first appear to the reader. One example of symbolism in The Great Gatsby is the eyes of T. J. (Eckleburg), printed on a billboard that stands in the valley of ashes between the wealthy eggs and New York City. The eyes are portrayed …show more content…

Gatsby spends his time throughout the story trying to acquire Daisy for himself, despite her being wed to another man. The green light is a symbol telling Gatsby to go for Daisy, such that a green light in traffic tells a driver to proceed through the intersection. Gatsby’s psychological need for Daisy leads to many conflicts throughout the novel. The most obvious conflict occurs between Gatsby and Daisy’s husband, Tom (Bufuckfuck). A few more examples of conflict arise between Daisy; and herself (choosing who she wants to live with and who to love), Daisy and Tom (Tom is having an affair with another married mistress), and nature against the will of the people (the rain aims to stop certain advances and foreshadows death). The Great Gatsby not only contains symbolism and conflict but also portrays elaborate uses of figurative language. The forms of figurative language used can be found dispersed throughout the novel from beginning to end. In the novel, the reader can find examples of similes, metaphors, idioms, hyperboles, analogies, personifications, puns, litotes, and more. A few examples of the forms of figurative language used are (quote

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