Why Does Fitzgerald Present The Narrator In The Great Gatsby

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Fitzgerald presents Nick is an intradiegetic narrator throughout the novel. He is portrayed as an outsider, mostly observing the events of the main plot and the story of Gatsby. He is involved in smaller subplots throughout the novel. However, as the novel progresses Nick sometimes speaks from third person (hetrodiegetic) to first person (homodiegetic) during the course of the novel
In the exposition Nick gives the reader the reason to question his reliability with the opening when he says: ‘And, after boasting this way of my tolerance, I come to the admission that it has a limit’. Fitzgerald may have deliberately intended to change the narrative perspective top allow the audience to question Nick’s reliability and also to heighten the suspense and sensitivity in our minds. However, his thoughts about Gatsby changes throughout the novel and it could be argued that he is biased as he is deeply involved into mysteries and the relationship and is drawn to be more sympathetic towards Gatsby. …show more content…

He is a much more reliable narrator. His slow-thinking and sentimental narration could have been affected as he susceptible to drinking alcohol especially when he went to Gatsby’s house he had ‘taken two finger-bowls of champagne’ and the fact that he read ‘a chapter Simon called Peter’ which didn’t make an sense to him because he drank ‘terrible stuff of whisky’. This highlights the fact that Nick is under the influence of alcohol which is creating obstacles in him and narration of the story is also

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