Nick Carraway - Character analysis of The Great Gatsby

CHARACTER ANALYSIS OF "THE GREAT GATSBY" F. SCOTT FITZGERALD I. Take notes on any 4 characters. Nick Carraway: * Nick, is the narrator of this story. Every single episode is described as he sees it. This can be seen by the usage of the first person when Nick expresses himself "In my younger and..." (page 1). * As Nick explains us in the first chapter, he is from a wealthy family and comes from the mid-west part of the U.S. We also know that Nick lives in New-York, Long Island, in an area called West Egg. He studied at New-Haven and graduated in 1915. That is where he met Tom Buchanan. He knows Daisy too because she is his cousin. * He says he is in the bond business. He thinks the bond business is a good one because "everybody I knew was in the bond business". * At his arrival in New-York, he becomes the neighbour of a rich man: Mr. Gatsby. This is how Nick gets involved In the relations between the Buchanan's and Gatsby. * Nick has a quite strange relationship with Jordan Backer a GOLF PLAYER, in fact, it can be said that it is a quite ambiguous relationship. This relationship will end at the end of the book "I don't know which of us hung up with a sharp click, but I know I didn't care." * Nick is a fair person, for every event or person he encounters; he always has a judgement for it. That makes him fair but an honest man too. * It's only at the end of the novel

  • Word count: 1305
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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The great gatsby

The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby was written by F. Scott Fitzgerald in the 1920's. F. Scott Fitzgerald was born into an Irish Catholic house hold. He was born in the 1890's in Minnesota in the US. He became a great author of many books (such as The Mystery of the Raymond Mortgage, The Romantic Egoist, This Side Of Paradise, etc.). His first literature was published in the school paper when he was thirteen years old. Many of F. Scott Fitzgerald novels and short stories are said to reflect on his own life. F. Scott Fitzgerald used his wife, Zeldas, mental breakdowns and their overall dysfunctional relationship in his writings. Zelda was in and out of clinics. She eventually moved back in with her mother. F. Scott Fitzgerald died of a second heart attack in 1940. Zelda lived on for eight more years and later died in a fire at a hospital in North Carolina. One of the famous books written F.Scott Fitzgerald, was The Great Gatsby. The Great Gatsby, by F.Scott Fitzgerald, represents 'the American Dream" of hard work, a persons hard work to achieve the goal of wealth and property. This American dream of 920's is overshadowed by the morel decay of the values once held high, the unprecedented gain of material excess. The social and moral values of 1920s', "The Roaring Twenties", was an era of decay of set values. The

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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From the way Priestly presents the characters, who do you think is most to blame for the death of Eva Smith/Daisy Renton?

Abigail Kaye From the way Priestly presents the characters, who do you think is most to blame for the death of Eva Smith/Daisy Renton? Inspector Calls is set in the fictitious North Midlands industrial city of Brumley during the Edwardian Era in 1912. Arthur Birling and his wife, Sybil, are holding a dinner party to celebrate their daughter's engagement. Among the guests is Gerald Croft, the daughter's fiancé. Gerald is the son of a business rival, Sir George Croft, and Mr. Birling is extremely pleased with the match partly due to the closer business links he hopes to develop with Gerald's father. The play centres on the arrival of a Police Inspector, who says he is investigating the suicide of a young working class woman. As the play progresses, we learn how each member of the family was involved with the woman, and how they all contributed to her apparent suicide. The Edwardian Era was a period of huge social divisions and distinctions. Characters such as Mr and Mrs Birling were very common. While they lived in luxury, over eight million people had to live on less that 25 shillings a week and as a result were in poverty. The working classes had virtually no rights and were separated into the "deserving" and "un-deserving" classes. J.B. Priestly was writing in 1946 at a time of great optimism, following the downfall of the Nazi Regime, and was trying to convey a message

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Quiz about The Great Gatsby. Who is The Great Gatsby narrated by?

Quiz on „The Great Gatsby“ . Who is “The Great Gatsby” narrated by? What do you know about his family background, and why does he com e to New York? What business is he in? Nick Carraway, the novel’s narrator, comes from a well-to-do Minnesota family. He travels to New York to learn the band business; there he becomes involved with both Gatsby and the Buchanas. . What is the difference between East Egg and West Egg? East Egg: East Egg is the fashionable group of social elite, also known as “old money” or people who have always had money. Tom and Daisy represent the “old establishment”, having lived the wealthy upper class for most of their lives. West Egg: West Eggers are the newly rich. The people who have worked hard and earned their money in a short period of time, sometimes by bootlegging (Gatsby). . Describe Tom Buchanan. How old is he? What was he famous for at college? How do you know that he is a racist? Tom Buchanan is 30 years old and he’s a former Yale football player who comes from an immensely wealthy Midwestern family. His racism and sexism are symptomatic of his deep insecurity about his elevated social position. He tried to interest others in a book called “The Rise of the Coloured Empires“. . Where did Nick first meet Tom? How does Nick meet Gatsby? Tom Buchanan: Nick first met Tom at Yale University, and when Nick heads over

  • Word count: 772
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald The Corruptive Nature of Wealth Rough Copy By Sarah Zaidi Miss Cheung ENG 4U January 6, 2009 The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald is set during the Roaring Twenties. For many Americans, this was a time full of prosperity and free-spiritedness because the economy was on a steady climb after the war. Fitzgerald's narrator in the novel, Nick Carraway, moves from his home in Minnesota to pursue the bond business in New York. Nick rents a bungalow in West Egg, a community where new wealthy individuals reside across from the East Egg. The East Egg is another division on the Long Island Sound and it is home to established individuals with reputable money. Upon arriving to West Egg, Nick is thrown into a world full of lavish parties and materialistic desires where people despise poverty and long for money and sophistication. Greed and dishonesty are dominant issues in the novel and corruptive wealth is the cause of the majority of the conflict regarding the morals of the secondary characters; Tom Buchanan, Daisy Buchanan and Jordan Baker. Tom Buchanan is a rich, influential man who lives with his beautiful wife and daughter in East Egg. It is understood that he is from a well-to-do, respected family however it is also apparent early on in the novel that the wealth he so easily inherited has affected his principles. Tom did not have

  • Word count: 1470
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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F.S. Fitzgerald: The Great Gatsby.

F.S. Fitzgerald: The Great Gatsby I would like to start my essay with the short summary of the plot of The Great Gatsby. Nick Carraway, the narrator of the story, has moved from the Midwest to New York. He wants to become a stockbroker to be rich. His cousin Daisy, who is married to Tom Buchanan, also lives in New York. One day Nick is invited to the party of his neighbour, Jay Gatsby. From the moment he hears about Gatsby, he is very inquisitive. After their first conversation, a friendship begins to be built. Nick is a very nice person and he becomes a kind of confessor for many people. He learns a lot about the other people's secrets. Nick learns about the Daisy's and Gatsby's past relationship and about their braking up because of their different social level. On the other hand, Nick learns about the relationship of Tom Buchanan and Myrtle that is going on behind Daisy's back. One day, Nick meets Jordan Baker who tells him the truth about the relationship between Gatsby and Daisy. Jordan explains to Nick that Gatsby is still very much in love with Daisy and that he wants her back. However, Gatsby needs Nick's help. On Gatsby's request, Nick invites Daisy to his house where Gatsby and Daisy finally meets again. They fall in love for the second time. Daisy oddly seems to be won over by the number of the shirts that Gatsby owns. Tom starts to be very suspicious. Gatsby

  • Word count: 1630
  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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The Great

Andrew Thompson Mrs. Dodson Honors English 11 May 12, 2005 The Corruptness of the American Dream The nineteen twenties was a decade of renaissance characterized by the American Dream- the widespread aspiration of Americans to live better than their parents. F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, The Great Gatsby, contains themes that continue to be relevant today. In his novel, Fitzgerald reprehends the American dream by describing its characteristics: the pseudo-relationship between money and happiness, the superficiality of the rich, and the class strife between the rich and the poor. "The American Dream is that dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement" (Mailer 97). This optimistic view of the American Dream is inaccurate. One just needs to look to Jay Gatsby, the protagonist in The Great Gatsby, in order to understand what the American Dream really is. Gatsby appears to be popular, wealthy, and happy. However, one would be oafish to believe his false appearance. People who knew who Gatsby was were flabbergasted when they had the opportunity to see him. Nick Carraway, the narrator of The Great Gatsby notes, "In his blue gardens men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars" (Fitzgerald 43). Everyone wanted to talk to

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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How does Fitzgerald strikingly convey the veneer and weakness of American Society in the 1920(TM)s in The Great Gatsby(Ch.1)

How does Fitzgerald strikingly convey the veneer and weakness of American Society in the 1920's in "The Great Gatsby"(Ch.1) F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote the book "The Great Gatsby", in which he strikingly conveys the veneer and weakness of the American Society in the 1920's. We can notice this in characters such as; Nick, Tom and Daisy Buchanan and Jordan Baker. And settings like; East Egg and West Egg. The veneer and weakness is clearly noticed because of description and the way the characters talk, and are. Nick Carraway's is the narrated of the book. In the first pages, Nick contradicts himself. In the firsts lines of Chapter 1 he says: "Whenever you feel like criticizing anyone(...) just remember that all the people in this world haven't had the advantages that you've had". This quote suggests that Nick is a tolerant, nonjudgmental person, proud, with his feet on the ground. "A sense of fundamental decencies is parceled out unequally at birth", and have had better "decencies" than most people. Nick was in New York and now has strong negative reactions to his experience in New York. But despite all this, he highly admires Gatsby. "Gatsby who represented everything for which I have an unaffected scorn" like New York, and the ways of thinking about the world. Still, Nick has a weakness towards Gatsby, who was a very important figure in New York in the 1920's, and also is his

  • Word count: 1095
  • Level: International Baccalaureate
  • Subject: Languages
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'The Great Gatsby' by F.Scott Fitzgerald.

THE GREAT GASTBY The book which will be studied within this essay is 'the Great Gatsby' by F.Scott Fitzgerald. The method of narration within 'the Great Gatsby' helped me to appreciate two important aspects of the text - theme and symbolism. The author successfully used the development of narration throughout the book in the form of the first person. I found this to be effective because of the narrator's (Nick) unbiased stance towards every situation in the book, as he says: "I am one of the few honest people I have ever known." (PAGE 66) There is also a second method of narration used within the book; this is in the form of breaks in narrating. During flashbacks, other voices chare the job of narrating - for example; Jordan Baker tells us about the time when Gatsby asked her to help him in his quest to win back Daisy. The plot within 'the Great Gatsby' is quite complex with many intertwining relationships causing the plot to come to an abrupt end. The story is focused around people striving to achieve the American Dream for different reasons which are not always kosher. 'The Great Gatsby' is about the lifestyles and secrets held among the higher-class society during the 1920's Jazz Age. The book tells of a man named Jay Gatsby who's one obsession in life was to be reunited with Daisy Buchanan. Daisy Buchanan, was Gatsby's first love, however, they had been forced

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  • Level: GCSE
  • Subject: English
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Tom and Gatsby: Contrasting Differences As Seen Through Nick

Tom and Gatsby: Contrasting Differences As Seen Through Nick In his literary masterpiece The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald paints a picture of American high-society during the "Roaring Twenties". In order to appreciate The Great Gatsby, it is essential to understand the setting of the book. Hudson Gevaert describes the 1920's in America on his informative website. He states: They were known as the Roaring Twenty's because the economy at the time was through the roof and people were partying all over the place. At the time there was a legal ban on the manufacture and sale of intoxicating drink called prohibition. ...Organized criminals catered to the needs of the drinking public by illegally supplying them with liquor and made a fortune doing it. Even with all the crime in the Jazz Age though, it will still be remembered for its glittering lights and unbridled romance. Along with the elaborate parties, scandals, and romances prevalent in this book, The Great Gatsby is a notable example of the "American Dream" and the means to attain that dream. The "American Dream" is defined by living a life of happiness, prominence, and wealth. This was either attained by being born into money, or by creating your own prosperity. The latter relies on personal struggles and plays a key role in shaping a young man in the book by the name of James Gatz. James Gatz created an

  • Word count: 1963
  • Level: University Degree
  • Subject: Linguistics, Classics and related subjects
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