Why Is Home Important In The Great Gatsby

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“The greatest, gaudiest spree in history” that is how F. Scott Fitzgerald described the rowdiest periods in America. Fitzgerald was one of the greatest American writers of the 20th century, who wrote short stories and novels that illustrated the jazz ages. Among which, The Great Gatsby became one of his finest work; a novel based in a time where the United States experienced an economic expansion and was all about celebration and prosperity with lavish parties, effortless money and non-stop drinking. In this paper, we will discuss the value of author's home as an important influence in their writings Scott Fitzgerald. Additionally, we will analyze the importance of home as a way of understanding American values and ethos.

The home of someone has always been a huge impact in peoples' life's and specially in authors; in the book Home: American Writers Remember Rooms of Their Own, Sharon Sloan discusses how eighteen American writers evoke rooms from their past, bringing back their history and the ideals and realities of families, memories and the importance of a home. Making the readers realize how fundamental is to have family …show more content…

Scott Fitzgerald finished was The Great Gatsby in 1925. A story where the narrator is Nick Carraway, a young man from Minnesota who moves to West Egg on Long Island, his neighbor Jay Gatsby lived in a luxurious mansion where the most extravagant parties where thrown frequently. The setting is based in the Roaring Twenties where parties, alcohol and money meant power and exclusivity, Nick Carraway narrates how Jay Gatsby was madly in love with a women name Daisy Buchanan, Nick's cousin; This is how Nick gets involved with Jay and become very good friends. This novel tells the story of the "American Dream" and corruption just to become rich and important in society as Jay Gatsby and also the opposite side which leads him to his death with no one by his side except Nick because of his ambition and

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