The Use and Effect of Imagery in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby

1020 Words3 Pages

The Use and Effect of Imagery in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby

A vivid imagination is a wonderful endowment created from sparks of ingenuity. The fire that ignites those majestic sparks is sensational writing. It is evident that F. Scott Fitzgerald certainly has a wild imagination in his novel “The Great Gatsby” due to the vast beauty of applied imagery. Every word Fitzgerald chose carefully and with full intent of stimulating the mood and tone of the novel. Thus, the sensory-oriented writing in Fitzgerald’s “The Great Gatsby” establishes mood and tone through the application of a multitude of motifs, detailed accounts of setting and intricate character descriptions.

The clever utilization of motif is consistent throughout the novel. Fitzgerald included a wide variety of motif in “The Great Gatsby” such as focusing on the elements of eyes, dreams, dust and ashes. As Nick Carraway begins the first chapter, he makes references to Jay Gatsby and the “foul dust” (p.8) that “floated in the wake of his dreams” (p.8) to foreshadow how Gatsby’s bright plans were stalked by tragedy. The tone portrayed from the motifs of dreams and dust is that of pity stemming from the powerful words. The introduction Tom Buchanan parallels that of another motif, the eyes. Nick immediately takes a disliking to Tom at first sight (quite the contradiction to Gatsby’s love at first sight with Daisy) and describes him as having “arrogant eyes” (p.12). Although a person cannot have eyes that are arrogant, Nick instantly notices a haughty air about Tom before a word was uttered between them which stabilizes a snide tone and an uncomfortable atmosphere. A tense mood is demonstrated by Nick’s observations that Tom, Daisy and Jordan were ...

... middle of paper ...

... Scott Fitzgerald’s usage of sensory-based techniques enhanced “The Great Gatsby” by appealing to what the reader knows and visualizing complicated concepts to create better understanding of the deeper meanings, subtle nuances as well as the overall intent behind the elaborate novel. Therefore, Fitzgerald’s abstraction of uniform motif, setting and character description created a variety of suitable moods and tones for each event throughout “The Great Gatsby”.

Work Cited Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York: Scribner, 2013. Print.

Open Document