Great Gatsby
Reading the highly-acclaimed novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, is an excellent way in which to learn about New York City and about America in the 1920s through literature. Certainly there are scenes, characters and quotes that are exaggerated and enhanced beyond what the real world at that time represented -- which is the license that writers of fiction are afforded. But the big picture of The Great Gatsby -- beyond the star-crossed love theme between Gatsby and Daisy -- is for the most part a portrayal of a slice of Americana out of what was called "The Roaring Twenties" and the "Jazz Age," and this paper references examples and themes from Fitzgerald's novel.
The Fading of the American Dream
The novel shows that money has corrupted key characters, notably Gatsby. And the sudden wealth that led to the corruption of values and morals happened after World War I ended. The character Nick, and Gatsby, had fought in the war, and the way Fitzgerald writes it, there was disillusionment after that brutal, bloody war, and many people were just trying to make money as fast as possible. On the East Coast, the previous idea of the "American Dream," that everyone would share in good fortune was thrown out the window in favor of greed, materialism and cynicism.
There was easy money in the Twenties, partly because Prohibition opened the door to bootleggers making huge profits (and Gatsby was a bootlegger), and because the stock market was an easy game to play and make money in a hurry. Again, the original American Dream was being shattered because the Dream originally meant that everyone was treated equally had an fair chance to live well, to enjoy middle class earnings and values, but the newly wealthy...
As we have already mentioned, the mood and tone for moral corruption in New York City was prime in the 1920s and while it may seem there are the rich and the poor, class distinction among the rich plays an important role in the novel. Gatsby's success will only carry him so far because of a dividing line that exists between the new wealth and the old wealth. This
In this book, then, desire and lust -- and their inability to be fulfilled in any meaningful way -- lead directly and explicitly to destruction, and even a desire for destruction which is itself thwarted and seemingly unattainable in this book. The ride on the sled does not kill Ethan and Mattie, but rather renders them incapable of desire (or acting on it0, and even changes the dynamic of
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