FLASHBACK Boy, look at me in my face Tell me that you're not just about this bass You really think I could be replaced? Nah... I come from outer space And I'm a classy girl I'm a hold it up You full of something but it ain't love And what we got is straight overdue Go find somebody new I banged on my dresser until I finally hit my alarm clock. I walked downstairs for breakfast but no food was on the stove. That really pissed me off in so many ways but I just ignored the fact that my own mother is too busy sleeping to make me breakfast. I grab a bowl and spoon and fix myself some Frosted Flakes. I sit at the table and eat quietly until my sister comes in with her hair all over her face. I giggle because she looks like she just got done leaving …show more content…
SIT DOWN AND SHUT UP. "HE.... Emily was cut off again. Emily flung across the room screaming like a baby that just got slapped on the butt. I crawl on the floor so I won't get hit. I comfort Emily but she just cried even harder. "YOUR A MON..." FLASHBACK OVER HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH HANNAH! My friend Marissa yelled. "Huh what happen?" I said cluelessly. "This is your last day with me before you move and your ignoring me! Hey before you leave remind me to give you the Bestest Best-Friend Forever Award!" Marissa said sarcastically. "Look I'm sorry I'm just stressed out about the move and my mother's death! I wish didn't have to move but I'm kinda glad. I mean every since her death weird stuff has been happening to me. Like yesterday I walked out my bathroom and went downstairs and the door was wide open. I tryied to check the house but I heard something break in the kitchen. So I had to make a choice stay an fight or run like hell? And I definitely made the right choice." I said. "You ran didn't you?" Marissa said harshly. "What do you take me for a chicken?! And no I sprinted to my neighbors house thank you very much! I said proudly.
Throughout F. Scott Fitzgerald’s work The Great Gatsby, Nick Caraway undergoes a large transformation. His character arc demonstrates the negative effects of being part of a rich and privileged society, and that even though the 1920’s era looks beautiful and fun, a great many of its inhabitants were empty. Nick Caraway starts the novel hopeful, but as he is exposed to the amoral culture of the rich socialites and businessmen, he becomes cynical, bitter, and he abandons his habits of honesty, and reserving judgment.
The idea and definition of the American dream has been continually changing based on culture and time period. Many people classify it as the big house, with the white picket fence, the kids playing in the yard and a happy spouse. With this perception many believe this dream comes without struggle but in the novel The Great Gatsby, the characters emphasize that the hard ships don’t always make the American dream as dreamlike as others recognize. In a quote said by Craig L. Thomas, he states “You stuff somebody into the American dream and it becomes a prison.” For many characters the lifestyle they lead others to believe was so perfect was actually a nightmare that they could not wake up from.
In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Nick’s unreliability as a narrator is blatantly evident, as his view of Gatsby’s actions seems to arbitrarily shift between disapproval and approval. Nick is an unreliable and hypocritical narrator who disputes his own background information and subjectively depicts Gatsby as a benevolent and charismatic host while ignoring his flaws and immorality from illegal activities. He refuses to seriously contemplate Gatsby’s negative attributes because of their strong mutual friendship and he is blinded by an unrealized faith in Gatsby. Furthermore, his multitude of discrepancies damage his ethos appeal and contribute to his lack of dependability.
Think about being separated from the one you love. You thought this person would be in your life forever and always. You may have spent days and weeks thinking and planning your future together, but then one day they disappear from your life. That person has moved on, and chose to live a life that no longer including you. It would be assumed in most cases that the love of your life is no longer the person they were before, so should you stick around and try to win them back? In the case of Gatsby and Daisy, Gatsby did not realize Daisy would be different, and although he still thinks he is in love with Daisy, is he in love with her for who she is now, or the idea of everything she used to be the answer may shock you, and this is all due to the unreal expectations he has for her to fill. Because Gatsby is not in love with who she is at the time they are reunited. Instead, he is caught up in the idea of who she used to be. The actions of Gatsby, how he talks about her, and the relationship between Gatsby and Daisy once they are back together again show who Gatsby is really in love with, and that is the old Daisy.
Although there was an astounding amount of impoverished people in New York during the nineteen twenties, there happened to be a petite community of affluent individuals living extremely lavish lifestyles. Wealthy residents of New York often are void of important values like honesty, sympathy, and compassion. Per contra, most people existing in poverty live
“The Great Gatsby” is a novel written by F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1925, during the Jazz Age. The story is revealed through the eyes of Nick Carraway, a simple man that works on Wall Street and lives in the West Egg. Many of the characters in “The Great Gatsby” have deep and strong connections to the past. One of the main characters, Jay Gatsby, is someone who lives and dwells on the past throughout the novel, more so than any of the other main characters. Fitzgerald clearly shows Gatsby’s love and obsession with the past and with Daisy, and he does so by revealing Gatsby’s choices and judgements throughout the novel. The author displays this to the reader to help support and drive the main plot. Daisy was in love with
Twain, Mark. "Revised Catechism." Collected Tales, Sketches, Speeches & Essays: 1891-1910. New York: Library of America, 1992. Print.
In the story “The Great Gatsby” by Fitzgerald the reader is told a story through the eyes of the narrator Nick. Nick has many friends and acquaintances in the story, but the most important being Gatsby and Tom. Throughout the story Gatsby’s characterization is made to make him look like the protagonist while Tom’s is to make him look like that antagonist. However, while we see the story through Nick’s eyes the reader is actually seeing the opposite. Nick agrees with Gatsby’s actions more than Tom’s which starts to create a bias. This makes it very easy for the reader to instantly dislike Tom’s character and side with Gatsby. However, the reader does not always think about the situation without the bias giving them an illusion of what is really happening. Even though Gatsby is the main character of the story his antagonistic actions are easily overseen. In the story, Gatsby is deemed the antagonist due to his intent of stealing Daisy from Tom.
I sometimes regret bringing gatsby and daisy together for that afternoon of tea or even meeting Gatsby in the first place or even moving next door to him, of course I didn't know I was going to live by the most interesting and complicated man I have ever met in my life. His yellow roadster was ripping throw the street, the glissining of his bright yellow paint job as it ripped through the trees and brush just as a Warbler would.
In regards to Nick’s reliability and effectiveness in his role as the narrator, I believe that he is entirely qualified and that it was the most effective way to narrate the novel. First of all, he lives right next door to Gatsby which allows him to assist Gatsby due to his close proximity. In addition, Nick is Daisy’s second cousin once removed so he can closely observe the relationship between her and Gatsby. Since he is a secondary character and not Gatsby himself, his emotions are not as affected by Daisy’s or Tom’s actions. His nonpartisan perspective and understanding personality is stated in the beginning of the book. “…I’m inclined to reserve all judgments, a habit that has opened up many curious natures to me…” (1) However, he is close to these characters so he can also give insight to the audience and has many intrusions throughout the story. Even though Nick is supposed to simply be a character in the book, it hints that he is also the author of the book and has an omniscient point of view. He also makes the audience feel as if he is speaking directly to them and simply retelling a story from the summer he spent with Gatsby.
In chapter 6 of the novel The Great Gatsby by F.Scott fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby a man with newly acquired wealth longs for the love of Daisy Buchanan a wealthy and married women. Gatsby is a very mysterious man, many rumors circulate about him and of his wealth. Gatsby does not address these rumors, he continues to throw extravagant parties for anyone who chooses to attend them. Fitzgerald uses imagery and allusions to portray Gatsby’s vulnerable, tender , and optimistic views of Daisy of their future together.
“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past,” (Pg. 180) the last line of the novel The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, meaning there is a hopeless with respect to personal progress and ultimately our destiny does not push us forward but alas backward into the past. Hence we are tethered to our past forever. In the novel The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald swept his readers away with his imaginative and somewhat of an autobiographical portrayal of the 1920’s terms, “old money” and “good money.” In this imaginative and autobiographical portrayal of the 1920’s, Fitzgerald also tells of a man named Gatsby and his desperate search for a lost dream. Ultimately, however F. Scott Fitzgerald writes The Great Gatsby with much complex characters, symbolic references, and themes to enhance and enrich his electric, 1920’s novel.
“The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald is a book about a young rich man that had a mysterious past. The author intentionally chose Nick as the narrator of this story. He is Gatsby’s neighbor, and he often contradicts himself. He said he was taught by his father to not criticize people, but he often criticized people including Gatsby. Critics in real life often behave like Nick and are hypocritical.
This passage shows Nick making his way through New York at night, seeing the sights and narrating the way this external stimuli makes him feel. It exemplifies the manner in which Nick interacts with the world around him, often as an observer, rather than participant, and is integral to the development of his character. Fitzgerald utilizes vivid imagery throughout the paragraph, paired with a strong narrative regarding Nick’s experience in New York; furthermore provoking the audience to ponder a theme central to the novel.
This passage is from the great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. It tells a story, specifically the history which Gatsby and Daisy had. Daisy promised to wait for Gatsby until the war ended. But as it is Daisy’s youth and need for love and attention has made her insecure to stay alone for so long. Soon she attended parties and dances. At one of them she met the safe and strong Tom Buchanan. Despite the fact that she loved Jay, he was not there, so she married Tom.