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The Great Gatsby

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Great Gatsby

The great gatsby and the fall of the american dream.

The book 'The Great Gatsby' by F. Scott Fitzgerald was an 'icon of its

time.' The book discusses topics that were important, controversial and

interesting back in 1920's America. The novel is 'an exploration of the

American Dream as it exists in a corrupt period of history.' The main

themes in the book are the decay of morals and values and the

frustration of a 'modern' society. The Great Gatsby describes the decay

of the American Dream and the want for money and materialism. This

novel also describes the gap between the rich and the poor (Gatsby and

the Wilsons, West Egg and the Valley of the Ashes) by comparing the

differences between the Western United States (traditional western

culture) and the Eastern United States (money obsessed values). On a

smaller scale this could be seen as the difference between the West Egg

(the 'new, money) and the East egg (the 'old' money). The 1920's were

a time of corruption and the degradation of moral values for the United

States and many other countries. World War One had just ended and

people were reveling in the materialism that came with the end of it,

new mass produced commodities such as motor cars and radios were

filling people's driveways and houses, money was more accessible

(before the Great Depression). Cars were becoming a social symbol in

the 1920s as we can see with Gatsby's five cars, one of which he gives

to Nick and one of which kills Myrtle Wilson later on in the novel.

Herbert Hoover (an American President) said in 1925 "We will root out

poverty and put two cars in every garage." The parties that Gatsby held

every week in the summer were a symbol of the carelessness of the time.

Gatsby would hide in the house while the 'guests', most of whom were

not even invited, would party, eat and drink until the early hours of

the morning without even meeting the guest or even knowing who he was.

People would turn up just to be seen or reported in the local

newspapers "In his blue garden people came and went like moths among

the whisperings and the champagne." This shows the carelessness of the

guests. Another quote about the parties refers to the way the guests

devour the endless supply of food and never give a thought as to who

gave it to them. "Every Friday five crates of oranges and Lemons

arrived from a fruiterer In New York- Every Monday these same oranges

and lemons left his backdoor in a pyramid of pulpless halves." This is

also a symbol; it relates the 'pulpless halves' to the rather 'empty'

guests, soulless people obsessed by image and wealth, a corruption of

the American Dream. Another sign of the fall of the American Dream in

The Great Gatsby is the way Gatsby makes his money. Gatsby gets his

fortune through the illegal sale of alcohol ('bootlegging'). The sale

of alcohol was prohibited in the United States in the 1920s. Gatsby

came from the western United States where there was 'old money.' There

he met Dan Cody who taught him how to 'bootleg.' As Gatsby became

richer he moved to West Egg in New York. Gatsby's house is a rather

artificial place, the house was originally built to impress Daisy with

his so-called wealth, and this is a sign of a corrupt way of 'winning'

love through money and wealth. Gatsby's house is furnished well with

old looking ornaments and (probably) second hand antiques, Gatsby's

house also has a library which is full of 'uncut' literature. The

conversation between Jordan and an unnamed man at one of Gatsby's

parties talks about the books: "Absolutely real - have real pages and

everything. I'd thought they'd be a nice durable cardboard." These

books and antiques are just Gatsby's way of showing off his wealth to

others, however Gatsby doesn't really care for materialism, we can tell

this because his bedroom, the only room he really ever uses, is empty

compared to the

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