How Does Myrtle Use Social Class In The Great Gatsby

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In the book Great Gatsby there are many examples of society and social class, many are shown to us as the book progresses. Some are shown to us very up front while, others are hidden in the text. Society and social class play a critical part in this book such as how people interact with the lower classes, to how the rich live their lives. When we look deeper into on how the Great Gatsby handles sociality and social class, which puts the characters in the positions they are in. “This is a valley of ashes—a fantastic farm where ashes grow like wheat into ridges and hills and grotesque gardens; where ashes take the forms of houses and chimneys”(Fitzgerald 2). Tom and Nick a driving through a place between West Egg and New York, which is an industrial zone where the lower class lives. Here alone we can see how the poor class lives their daily lives in filth, but the rich live in shiny clean houses. …show more content…

"These people! You have to keep after them all the time”(Fitzgerald 2). Tom has invited Nick to an apartment to have party, and they are having a conversation with other people. When Myrtle is around Tom she acts like she owns the whole building, treating the employees like tools. When Tom is around it automatically rises Myrtles social status. When i read this I can make a pretty good picture on how Mytel would look saying this, having the look of a dictator. “There was music from my neighbor's house through the summer nights. In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne”(Fitzgerald 3). Nick is giving his point of view on how the people acted in gatsby's party. I can picture the people in the party as moths circling around a light bulb. Nick must have been high up to see the people below in order to study their actions. I can picture clearly people walking around each other, some talking others

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