What Is The Sacrifice In The Great Gatsby

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A façade is considered as a part of the human life to disguise its most inner desires and hope. F. Scott Fitzgerald uses plenty of diction throughout the novel to describe a person or place. His style of writing involves a great deal of hope which ends in emotional pain. The three consecutive characters, which include Gatsby, Nick, and Daisy, are drawn into putting up a façade due to their own personal desire and/or history.
In the novel, the eyes of Doctor T.J. Eckleburg are portrayed as God-like who “knows what [you’re] doing, everything [you’re] doing”. The Bible speaks very highly of having hope, thus “hope of the righteous brings joy”. The three characters have hope for their own desire and manage to do everything in their own strength …show more content…

Evidently, it means more than shoplifting or robbing a bank. It refers to stealing from man, from your neighbor, in contradiction of “‘[loving] your neighbor as yourself”.
Moreover, Nick is revealed as the character others go to release their thoughts, their guilty pleasures. Furthermore, Tom takes nick to meet Myrtle, Gatsby confesses him about Daisy, Nick is aware of both affairs. Additionally, peer pressure or being lonely might have given him that little push to keep their secret. As if he is over-powered by the other characters which take “over the tiny and tremendous decisions [he] make[s] daily”.
Peer pressure doesn’t occur only in adolescents, as mention in an online paper, “No one is immune from peer pressure”. Perhaps a man is feeling intimidated by a neighbor because they have a brand new truck while he’s still trying to pay off the old truck. Yet, the pressure kicks in and makes him stretch his limits. Resulting in putting up a front for something/someone …show more content…

Before the Women’s Suffrage, “women’s legal standing was fundamentally governed by their marital status”. A women’s duty was to be submissive to their husband and they could not get an education. Fair enough, the other generations was getting tired of that life, they started working on getting rid of that “duty”. Women did whatever they could be successful in getting their rights, to be able and say they're independent. When the nineteenth amendment passed, “[The] League of Women Voters new task, as they defined it, was to train women to exercise their individual citizenship rights”. The following year ,1920s a.k.a. Roaring twenties, focused more on partying, drinking, looking the best, which was some-what different from 1919. It focused more on style, including “the bob, rouge on the cheeks, powder on the knees, short skirts and ‘objectively’ cut

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