How Did F Scott Fitzgerald Use Water In The Great Gatsby

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Katherine L. Cottle American Lit 11th Grade C band McPherson. Reflecting Pool: An Analysis of Water in Reference to Themes of Rebirth and Transformation in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. Throughout the novel The Great Gatsby, F Scott Fitzgerald connects various bodies of water to multiple points in one of the primary characters' lives highlighting the phenomenon of crucial change. This character is Jay Gatsby, born James Gatz, who changes his identity in order to integrate into New York's upper class society. Gatsby is initially described by Fitzgerald as a wealthy, elusive man whom nobody seems to know personally, despite him throwing decadent, superfluous parties resulting in all of New York high society frequenting his doorstep. …show more content…

Fitzgerald begins the description of Gatsby’s past, referring to him as James Gatz–or ‘young Gatz’–but as he joins Cody on his ship, he fully becomes Jay Gatsby. Fitzgerald writes, “It was James Gatz who had been loafing along the beach that afternoon in a torn green jersey and a pair of canvas pants, but it was already Jay Gatsby who borrowed a rowboat, pulled out to the Tuolomee and informed Cody that a wind might catch him and break him up in half an hour” (Fayette, 97).” The initial description of James Gatz in his torn up shirt and rugged canvas pants, conjures an image of a working class boy, longing for As young Gatz boards his rowboat and sails out to meet Dan Cody on his lavish yacht, Fitzgerald describes Gatz 'informing’ Dan Cody of the oncoming wind which is quite a sophisticated way of saying Gatsby warned Cody to be cautious, indicating that James Gatz is growing into Jay Gatsby. as he sails across Lake Superior. The row boat drifting along the water represents James Gatzs’ transformation into Jay Gatsby, and the beginning of a new phase in this young boy's life. As Fitzgerald continues to describe Gatz and Cody’s growing bond, he writes how James Gatzs’ morph into Jay Gatsby occurs whilst sailing away on the Tuolomee. Fitzgerald continues, “And when the Tuolomee left for the West Indies and the Barbary Coast Gatsby left too (Fitzgerald, 100).” The act of the boat (the Tuolomee) leaving Lake Superior and driving into the vast ocean, represents James Gatz leaving his childhood home

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