Explain what Fitzgerald is trying to say about society through illusion

Explain what you think Fitzgerald is trying to say about society by presenting the idea of illusion so thoroughly throughout the text.

Fitzgerald is trying to say that there is a social divide and lower class people have a this dream of being like the upper class people, this is shown  through the idea of illusion .In the novel there are three areas which represent three different social classes: East Egg represent the ‘old money’. These people inherited their money from generation before and are considered the top of the social classes. These people such as Daisy and tom are represented through the colour white to show that they have no true connections, it is all made up of materialism and the colour gold because they have the money and are actually living rich, luxurious lives.then we have the West Egg, this side of the bay is where all the ‘new money’ people live. These people were born into middle to lower class families and wanted to achieve the ‘American Dream’ so they worked hard and eventually built their lives to be ‘rich’. At least to look like they are rich. This side of town is mainly shown through Gatsby and how everything he has is ‘fake’ and for show. West Egg is represented by the colours Yellow and Green. Finally there is the Valley Of Ashes, this is where all the lower class people live. This side of town is mainly represented by Myrtle and her husband George Wilson. These hard working people are almost like the West Eggers because eat one point in their lives they would have all being the same social class. People such as Myrtle and George have hope but very little of it, therefore they are given the symbol of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg’s eyes. This pair of eyes is a massive billboard which is located in this setting. These eyes also represent the ‘American Dream’ and corruption.

Most importantly these eyes represent god because it is almost if “they are always watching”.Throughout the novel  we see dreams and fantasies that the character make it seem possible, including Gatsby being able to relive the past. There’s also Nick’s dream of the old America: the place to which you go home for the holidays, “my Middle West . . . where dwellings are still called through decades by a family’s name.” There’s the vague dream of art represented,  by the photographer Mr. McKee, by Gatsby’s shirts, and through jazz. And on the margins are the dreams of intellectual life, business success, and family happiness. Gatsby is magnetic in part because he accepts everyone, no matter what it is they idealise: with a smile, Nick says, Gatsby “understood you just as far as you wanted to be understood, believed in you as you would like to believe in yourself, and assured you that he had precisely the impression of you that, at your best, you hoped to convey.” Only later do we realize that Gatsby is so open-minded because he is the ultimate dreamer and pretender. As much as we want to believe that anyone can be who they want and that everybody can be accepted into society, in the set time period of 1920’s many people were judgmental and unaccepting. This idea of judging everybody is shown through the character Nick Caraway. At the start of the novel Nick convinces the reader that he is trusting and non judgemental, but he soon portrays his image of being this non judgmental person.

Describe three symbols

Yellow/Gold:

Yellow is the meaning of jealousy and happiness. Jealousy is shown throughout book by Gatsby, Nick, Daisy, Tom, Myrtle, and George Wilson and happiness is constantly portrayed by the same characters.Gold is often used to represent wealth, high-class and expensive value. Gold can show the accomplishment of being in first place, or also  honouring and commending. Both yellow and gold are closely used throughout society.Gold is used to represent success and money while yellow is used to represent the ‘fools gold’. gold is traditional ‘old money’. Whereas yellow is just used for show and isn’t actually valuable unlike gold. “It was a big yellow car” This quote describes Gatsby’s car and the colour of it; yellow. His car is one of the many symbols that represent Gatsby wanting to get in to the high-class society but failing to do so. Yellow is not just the colour of money, but also of destruction. Yellow is the colour of the car that runs down Myrtle. The glasses of Eckleburg, looking over the wasteland of America, are yellow. This dual symbolism clearly associates money with destruction; the ash heaps are the filthy result of the decadent lifestyle led by the rich. This symbol appears throughout the text because it is constantly reminding the reader that Gatsby represent ‘fools gold’/ yellow and Daisy represents Gold.The symbol helps us to understand that Gatsby is false and his life is an illusion. Whilst Gold represents Daisy and helps us to understand that her items are real and aren’t just there for the show and to add to her wealth. Unlike Gatsby.

Green Light: 

The green light at the end of Daisy’s dock represents the “unattainable dream,” the “dream that must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it.” Green is a colour that represents hope, dreams, it also represents a new life and what could happen in the future. “He stretched out his arms… I glanced seaward and distinguished nothing except a single green light,” In this quote Gatsby represents a hopeful seeker, reaching out for his dreams which he can not get; Daisy. The green light appears in chapters 1,5 and 9. It appears in these chapters to signify that Gatsby’s dream of being with Daisy is slowly fading away more and more. Until it is completely covered by mist.”If it wasn’t for the mist we could see your home across the bay,” This quote tells the reader that the hope for getting Daisy back is gone, although Gatsby does not yet know this. The symbols help us to understand Gatsby. This is because the green light shows how hopeful Gatsby is. It shows that Gatsby is a dreamer, he sees things but can’t grasp them. He can’t grasp things such as Daisy or her love, the ‘American Dream’ he has chased since he was 17 or the wealth and the social status he wants.  The green light represents illusion because Gatsby is so caught up in his fake life, that he keeps dreaming and he thinks that everything is so close and that everything that he wants is achievable when in reality its far away. His dreams and goals will just stay a dream because it is not possible to rewind or relive the past, it is impossible for Gatsby to live in East Egg with the ‘old money’, because he wasn’t born into that social class and that will always stay the same. 

Flowers: 

In the Great Gatsby flowers are used to materialise the rich and reference hope.”he broke off and began to walk up and down a desolate path of fruit rinds and discarded flavours and crushed flowers” this quote means that Gatsby’s dream are ‘crushed’ and he is just walking past them not realising that they are no longer achievable. Flowers are all through out the novel, such as Daisy ,Caraway, and Myrtle are all flowers. This symbol tends to seem during or after major relationship events. The flowers seem to signify that either there is still hope and love or that both of those things are no longer in the relationship. Flowers represent different things for the characters, such as: to Nick flowers represent that he wants status and love. For Tom, he tends to ‘collect’ them: Daisy and Myrtle. This symbol helped me realise that Tom doesn’t appreciate his love interests, yet he likes to show of that he is married to Daisy. Since Daisy is a worthy price, almost like a trophy. This symbol can be related to illusion because flowers are used to represent love and hope but throughout the novel love is constantly portrayed by Tom, Daisy, Gatsby, Jordan, Myrtle and Nick. Flowers also portray hope because when Daisy and Gatsby first meet in a room full of flowers, it is like they still have hope yet it is the first time they see each other since Daisy got married to Tom. So there is actually no hope for Daisy and Gatsby to fall in love again just like they were five years ago.

Describe three important relationships and what they revealed about illusion

 

Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby:

 

 

The relationship at the very heart of The Great Gatsby novel is Gatsby and Daisy long-lost connection, or more specifically, Gatsby’s obsession with Daisy. A love that drives the novel’s plot and Gatsby’s adult life. Five years before the start of the novel, Jay Gatsby (who had learned from Dan Cody how to act like one of the wealthy) was stationed in Louisville before going to fight in World War 1. In Louisville, he met Daisy Fay, a beautiful young heiress, who took him for someone of her social class. Gatsby maintained the lie, which allowed their relationship to progress. Gatsby fell in love with Daisy and soon enough they kissed: “Then he kissed her. At his lips’ touch she blossomed for him like a flower and the incarnation was complete.” From this point onwards: “He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God.” But this summer love didn’t las for long since Gatsby had to leave for the war and by the time he returned to the US in 1919, Daisy had married Tom Buchanan.Daisy and Gatsby’s relationship represents illusion because Gatsby has tried to relive the past and be in love with Daisy again. Where as it can’t be reality anymore because Gatsby isn’t wealthy, he has this ‘American Dream’ that can’t be reached. Their relationship is also an illusion because Daisy is married to Tom, and they have a baby girl together: Pammy. This relationship is fake because Daisy’s emotions are no longer real. She says things such as she loves Gatsby because she feels pressured to. For Gatsby and Daisy to runaway together like they want to, Gatsby want Daisy to admit that the past five years never happened and that she never loved Tom. Daisy doesn’t tell Gatsby what he wants to hear because she can’t. Because she did love Tom and one stage, and Gatsby too. Their relationship reveals illusion because Gatsby’s persona is fake, it is false. His whole life is made up of lies and materialistic things to make him look wealthy when really he is the same boy he used to be when he was with his family. He can’t relive the past or change it. Which is what he is trying to do. 

Myrtle and George Wilson: 

Myrtle Wilson is very materialistic. She is unsatisfied with her husband’s small repair shop and doesn’t like her life as the wife of a mechanic.She is desperate to improve her life so when she gets the opportunity to climb up the social ladder through Tom, she takes the opportunity. George Wilson on the other hand is a more meek man. He seems to be content with his life…that is until he discovers that his wife is cheating on him. Myrtle and George seem to have a loveless marriage, this is because Myrtle thinks that she is too good for George and isn’t happy with his social class, therefore she doesn’t love him. An earthy, vital, and voluptuous woman, Myrtle is desperate to improve her life.  She has had a long-term affair with Tom Buchanan, and is very jealous of his wife, Daisy. George is coated by the dust of despair and thus seems mired in the hopelessness and depression of that empty place, while Myrtle is alluring and full of liveliness. Her first action is to order her husband to get chairs, and the second is to move away from him, closer to Tom.When we first get introduced to George and Myrtle their relationship seems fractured, with vastly different personalities and motivations. We get the sense right away that their marriage is in trouble, and conflict between the two is about to happen. One night the couple have a fight and as a yellow car is approaching their home Myrtle  runs  out on the road shouting for help thinking that it is Tom. In a short span of time Myrtle gets hit and is instantly killed. Nick: “Was Daisy driving?”  Gatsby: ‘“Yes, but of course I’ll say I was.” Myrtle ran in front of Gatsby’s car, believing that Tom was driving, and was killed by Daisy, Tom’s wife. I find this extremely ironic. After her death, the size of his grief drives Wilson to murder Jay Gatsby before committing suicide himself.

Tom and Daisy Buchanan: 

Throughout the novel, it is  clear that Tom and Daisy have an unstable relationship.Both Tom and Daisy come from wealthy backgrounds and the upper level of society. Tom likes the idea of a beautiful and social wife; whilst Daisy enjoys having a wealthy and well-connected husband.Daisy is a hospitable character who is forever in love with having a rich and lavish lifestyle.Though big, strong, and arrogant, Tom still shows that he cares a bit for Daisy.Their relationship is toxic and unhealthy, yet they seem to have no intention of working to make it better. “Why they came east I don’t know. They had spent a year in France, for no particular reason, and then drifted here…wherever people played polo and were rich together.” Nick introduces Tom and Daisy as restless, rich, and as a singular unit. Despite all the revelations about the affairs and other events throughout the  novel. Our first and last descriptions of Tom and Daisy describes them as a close, if bored, couple. Tom and Daisy create this illusion of loving other people and not loving each other. Whereas they are actually really good for each other. This is because Daisy doesn’t know how to love someone , she only knows how to love money and social status. Daisy’s whole life is based on materialism and wealth. By the end of the novel, after Daisy’s murder of Myrtle as well as Gatsby’s death, she and Tom are firmly back together, “conspiring” and “careless” once again, despite the deaths of their lovers.As Nick notes, they “weren’t happy…and yet they weren’t unhappy either.” Their marriage is important to both, since it reassures their status as old money aristocracy and brings stability to their lives.”They were careless people, Tom and Daisy—they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.” This quote that is told by Nick, sums up Tom and Daisy’s relationship perfectly.

 

List the four main settings in the novel and discuss how they show the idea of illusion

East Egg:

East egg is where all the ‘old money’ people live. People that have inherited their money from their family live here, such as Daisy and Tom. The Buchanan’s live in :  “a cheerful red−and−white Georgian Colonial mansion, overlooking the bay.” People that live in East Egg tend to look down on people from the West Egg to display their superiority. East egg relates to the ‘American Dream’ because that’s what people from the Valley Of Ashes and West egg people want to be like. It is the ‘American Dream’ to be like the people from ‘old money’. This setting represents the rich people such as Daisy, Tom and Jordan, that have inherited their money from generations before. 

East Egg can be related to illusion because it the richer side of town which support the idea of the ‘American dream’. on the outside it seems like the people who live in East egg have an ideal, luxury life style that most people would dream of living. Although the truth really is that the people who live these luxurious lives pay a high ‘price’ because their lives are scandalous, dramatic and even contain murder, lies and hidden lovers. So overall their lives aren’t actually the dream, their lives are based on materialism and social class. If you aren’t born into ‘old money’ then you will never truly fit in with this “rotten crowd”. People that live here are all blank canvases. they don’t have true feelings, no real connections, and no love. This idea is expressed through Daisy and the colour white. Most people who live in East Egg would be able to relate to this colour as well because they are all bland and don’t have any relationships that aren’t based on materialism and money.

West Egg:

West Egg is where the ‘NewMoney’ people live such as Nick and Gatsby. People that live in this area are self-made, they were born into a middle class or a hard-working poor family. “I lived at West Egg, the—well, the less fashionable of the two” This quote describes that whilst West Egg is a wealthy community, it the less fashionable out of the two.  Another quote that describes this setting is: “Everyone in West egg is a bootlegger.” This quote which is said by Tom tell the readerTom’s opinion on the ‘new money’ people, mainly Gatsby. This setting is important because it represents the hard-working, self-made people who are being looked down on by the East Egg people such as Tom and Daisy.

West Egg shows the idea of illusion through its re occurring weather and water. At one point in the novel Nick sees Gatsby standing at the end of the dock with his arms stretched out towards across the bay. “He stretched out his arms toward the dark water in a curious way, and… I could have sworn he was trembling.” In the novel, the bay represents many things: separation, time, American Dream and struggle. The stretch of water symbolises the separation between Daisy and Gatsby. although Daisy’s house seems so close, it is actually quite far because there is big body of water between them.The water also symbolises time; particularly the last five years. Gatsby can see his future with Daisy and it so close, yet so far. This is what the water represents. West Egg also shows the illusion of the American Dream and Gatsby trying to reach this dream. All the people who live in West Egg want to be rich and high in social status like the people from East Egg. So the separation in the Eggs is also the separation in society. They are so close that they can see the end and their wanted lives, but once again the water between the boys symbolises time and what their past used to be liked.Poor or middle class.

The Valley Of Ashes:

In between the East and West Egg, there is a horrible stretch of road that goes through an area covered in dust and ash from the nearby factories. This place is called the Valley of Ashes, this is where Myrtle and George Wilson live. It isn’t actually made of ash but Nick refers to it like that because it’s really grey, dead and smokey. In the novel, the Valley of Ashes stands for the forgotten poor underclass people who enable the lifestyle of the wealthy few. These people are the ones who also represent the ‘American Dream’. They are the dreamers, they are ones that want to become rich and live a luxurious lifestyle. Although the reader knows that they can’t live those lives, it is all an illusion. This setting is import because it has The Eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg which become an import symbol through out this novel.The  giant eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg  are in  the middle of the Valley of Ashes, right next to Wilson’s garage.

Gatsby’s Mansion:

Mr Gatsby’s mansion is in West Egg right beside Nick’s little cottage. This is how Nick describes Gatsby’s mansion: “The one on my right was a colossal affair by any standard—it was a factual imitation of some hotel de Ville in Normandy, with a tower on one side, spanking new under a thin beard of raw ivy, and a marble swimming pool, and more than forty acres of lawn and garden. ” Gatsby’s house is notorious for its lavish and raucous parties: ‘There was music from my neighbors house through the summer nights. In his blue garden men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars.” Gatsby’s mansion also seems to be positioned right across the bay from Tom and Daisy’s house which shines a red light at night. 

Explain what each character helped you to understand about illusion in the novel

Throughout the novel the idea of illusion is shown through the three main characters: Daisy, Gatsby and Nick.  Daisy is associated with the idea of  illusion through the colour white. White is a pure shade ( not colour ) that represents innocence, peace purity and class. “Their house was even more elaborate than I expected, a cheerful red−and−white Georgian Colonial mansion, overlooking the bay.” This quote is great because it describes not only Daisy’s house but the quote incorporates the colour white. Dais represents the colour white because she likes to think of her self as pure, innocent, wealthy and real. Whereas she is the absolute opposite. Daisy isn’t pure, there are many more people just like her for example Jordan. She is also not innocent because she isn’t a fool, she sees how the world is but refuses to believe so that is why she says:”I’m glad it’s a girl.And I hope she’ll be a fool-that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool.” Another reasons why Daisy portrays the idea of white is because white also means that she is see through, fake, bland and has no real love or connections. Just like Gatsby, Daisy doesn’t have any true friends or love. Everything she owns and does is based on materialism, it is all based around being rich and keeping up withe the social class and constantly being the best. Overall Daisy helped me understand that everything she does is also to build onto the illusion of her being the best, pure and innocent. She made me realise that there is more to someone that what there seems to be and that colours can often represent more than to what we think. Gatsby shows illusion through out the whole book although the reader doesn’t actually realise till he puts the first crack in his story. Gatsby is a living, breathing, walking, illusion. His while life is based around Daisy and the fact that one day they will both be happy and together. In reality they will never be together, this is because Gatsby isn’t rich, he isn’t actually ‘gold’ he doesn’t have any true relationships ( apart from Nick who is his only true friend). Everything that Gatsby does is rehearsed, his story is so well rehearsed that he gets it exact every time, there are no holes in his plot. But that is until he meets Nick and reunites with Daisy again. Gatsby has all of these materialistic things such as the library. “See!” he cried triumphantly. “It’s a bona-fide piece of printed matter. It fooled me. This fella’s a regular Belasco. It’s a triumph. What thoroughness! What realism! Knew when to stop, too – didn’t cut the pages. But what do you want? What do you expect?” This quote mean so much more than what it seems. Firstly this is because the reference to Belasco describes Gatsby’s life. David Belasco was a man that set up scenes with props, he was a playwrighter and theatrical producer. This relates to Gatsby because he has being setting up his life ( arranging the props) to make everyone believe that he is a wealthy well known, loved man that comes from ‘old money’. Whereas the truth is he is nothing like that. The second part of the quote where Owl-eyes talks about the books being uncut describes Gatsby himself and of course his ‘fake’ life. Back in those days people used to get their books uncut and would have to cut the books themselves before reading, meaning that if the book is uncut it has not yet being read. Gatsby’s uncut books represent that a lot of what he presents to the world is a facade. He wants people to believe that he is a well-educated man, an Oxford man, but in fact he only spent a short time there after the war. He wants people to think that he is well-read, but he is never even cracked the covers. He has built up this  image of himself that is not  consistent with the facts of his life. But the unopened, unread books represent Gatsby himself: mysterious, undeveloped, closed up and unopened. The third and final main character Nick shows the reader illusion through out the whole book. At the start of the book Nick shares with the reader some advice that his father gave to him in his “younger more vulnerable years”. Nick’s father told him this:“Whenever you feel like criticising any one,” he told me, “just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.” This quote is almost stating that we should trust Nick’s judgment. Whilst he comes of as thoughtful and caring we also get a senses of he is judgmental and odd. This advice that nick’s father gives him almost seems like it is a ‘dig’ at him, because it makes him sound like he is always  judging people’s behaviours and action without considering their circumstances or context. This tells us that one of his main weaknesses is judging people, and considering that the book is told through his eyes this is a believable statement. Just like all the other characters, Nick also potrays his desired image and shows people that he is actually judgemental. Gatsby shows us hie life is actually like a well planned scene with props. Whilst Daisy shows the readers that she is actually bland and bases he life around materialism and wealth.

Describe three key characters and how they change in the novel. 

Daisy Buchanan:

Towards the start of the novel we meet Daisy when she is sitting on the couch dressed all in white with Jordan. Daisy is then associated with the colour white through out the book (white car, white dress, and white flowers etc.) At the start she is also represented as an angel, that is pure, and innocent. Fitzgerald also makes her seem perfect among everyone else’s lies and cheating.Gatsby’s obsession with her seems reachable after all the lengths he’s gone to. At this stage, Daisy is seen like a worthy prize to Gatsby. As the story goes on we start to see more of Daisy’s true colours and that her life is based around materialism.Daisy changes because towards the end the purity of her being white is gone. We start to see her become more of a silver colour because she isn’t as pure and innocent as she seems. Her personality becomes scruffy because she is no longer the angel that she made out to be. We finally get to see that her whole life is materialistic. This is because she has not true friends, she doesn’t know what happiness feels like, She doesn’t have close family nor does she know how to love someone or what it feels like to be loved.I think that white represents her the best because white is not actually a colour and she is blank. Just like white. She has no ‘heart’ and no feelings or love but she does have a realisation and advice for her daughter :”I’m glad it’s a girl.And I hope she’ll be a fool-that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool.” She want she daughter to be a fool so she doesn’t realise what the world actually is. She says this because she has experienced it and Daisy knows that this is no world for a woman. She wants her daughter to survive through beauty and not brains. When Daisy kills Myrtle all of her white pureness that surrounds her vanishes and she is no longer seen as innocent. 

Jay Gatsby:

Gatsby is a wealthy man who lives in a mansion in the West Egg who is well-known for hosting giant parties hoping that Daisy the love of his life would one day wonder in. When we first meet Mr Gatsby he is a gracious, mysterious, dreamer. As the story goes on Gatsby’s mysteriousness unfolds and we find out that he has being chasing the most unrealistic dream his whole adult life. We find out that Gatsby has been chasing the dream of marrying Daisy Buchanan the wife of Tom. Gatsby’s success story of how he went from poor to rich, makes Gatsby an embodiment of the American Dream. He was born into a poor farming family which had little to nothing but as Gatsby grew up he decided to leave home with the dream to fulfil the ‘American Dream’. Once Gatsby left home he ended up having even less than what his family had but that is until he met a sailor… Dan Cody. Dan Cody taught Jay Gatsby how to pursue dreams and turn them into goals. Through this period Jimmy Gatz evolved into Jay Gatsby, to be later recognised as ‘The Great Gatsby’. Life started to become unknown to Gatsby and very different although he was missing true friends and money. “He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God. So he waited, listening for a moment longer to the tuning fork that had been struck upon a star. Then he kissed her.” This quote describes when Gatsby and Daisy first meet and how he was drawn to her and felt the need to make himself worthy enough for Daisy. From this moment onwards Gatsby went on to  make money to get his dream girl… Daisy. Although Gatsby fell in love with Daisy that summer and he went on to treasure those moment with her for ever, Daisy did not feel the same way. We can tell this because whilst Gatsby was out making him self a worthy man for Daisy, she went on to marry a wealthy man Tom. From then on everything Gatsby did was for the singular purpose of winning Daisy over and falling in love with her again. At that time money was the issue since Daisy came from ‘old money’ and inherited her wealth whereas Gatsby came from a poor family and wasn’t good enough for Daisy. Gatsby wants people to believe that he inherited his money, although he made his wealth through a well organised crime. Gatsby’s well-known phrase ‘Old Sport’ is actually used to build the illusion that he is from old money.He uses this phrase ‘Old Sport’ because it was used among wealthy people in England and America at the time.He profited greatly from selling liquor illegally. By being so focused on pursuing his dream goal Gatsby became more and more drawn into a fantasy world of what how ‘great’ he thinks his life is. Gatsby is an idealistic character because he tries to distance himself from his young poor life, yet he lives his adult life trying to recapture the past he had with Daisy.”Can’t repeat the past?” he cried incredulously. “Why of course you can!”This quote proves that Gatsby still very much believes that he can still rebuild the past he had with Daisy.          

Nick Caraway:

We first meet Nick at the start of the novel before he got dragged into the wealthy chaotic world of New York. Nick is the narrator of the book therefore this book is written from Nick’s perspective. Although at the start of the novel Nick is more of a background character he soon becomes vital to the story and one of the main characters. He comes from the upper Midwest (Minnesota or Wisconsin) and has supposedly been raised on stereotypical Midwestern values such as hard work, perseverance, justice, and so on. One of the first things Nick tells the readers is some advice that his father gave him when he was young: “Whenever you feel like criticising any one,” he told me, “just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.”. This quote is almost stating that we should trust Nick’s judgment. Whilst he comes of as thoughtful and caring we also get a senses of he is judgmental and odd. This advice that nick’s father gives him almost seems like it is a ‘dig’ at him, because it makes him sound like he is always  judging people’s behaviours and action without considering their circumstances or context. This tells us that one of his main weaknesses is judging people, and considering that the book is told through his eyes this is a believable statement.  Nick’s moral sense makes him stand out from the other characters and show that he is not like them. From the first time he meets Daisy, Tom, and Jordan (in Chapter 1), he clearly isn’t like them. He is represented more of a  practical and down-to-earth than person u like the other characters. This is also shown in Chapter 2 when Nick doesn’t know how to respond when he is  introduced into Tom and Myrtle’s secret love. We also notice that he doesn’t feel the need to tell anyone about his adventures or story unlike Gatsby who is constantly trying to convince people he is ‘wealthy’. Once again in Chapter 3 Nick is different form everyone else because unlike the other, Nick was waiting for an invite to attend one of Gatsby’s grand parties. Once Nick walked into the party he was only focused on one thing at that was to find the host; Gatsby. Once he finally Met Gatsby he described him as:” He smiled understandingly — much more than understandingly. It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life.” 

   

The Great Gatsby Narrator Questions…

How does Fitzgerald paint Nick as a narrator? What quality (or qualities) is he given? 

Fitzgerald makes Nick seem like a very structured and a sensible man. Everything that Nick says has meaning to it and a purpose, therefore Nick is a very meaningful character in this novel. Fitzgerald also makes him seem very aware, this is because Nick is aware of everything that is going around him and he can see that Gatsby and his life is an illusion. Nick is very unlike the other characters because he is represented as being a non judgemental person unlike others like Daisy and Tom (etc), and he does not live in this materialistic world of money and status.Nick learns these great qualities from his dad, and a quote that represents this idea is: “Whenever you feel like criticising any one,” he told me, “just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.” This quote represent Nick very well because this a quote that he ives by throughout the novel. 

The Great Gatsby Chapter Four…

Fitzgerald tries to achieve an illusion which gives the reader a sense of the type of people who come to Gatsby’s parties.The majority of guest are rich and have little or no interest in Gatsby or his life. Fitzgerald generally describes the guests as self-absorbed and only interested in the party, a quote that represents this  idea is : “the people came like moths to the flame”. Another reason why the guest list is listed is to show that Gatsby invites all these higher class people to the party so it will support Gatsby’s delusion of being one of the wealthy and important people in the New York social society of that time.

The Great Gatsby Chapter Three…

David Belasco 

BORN: July 25th 1853 (San Fransisco, America) —Died : May 14th 1931

David Belasco was born in San Francisco, Calif, on July 22, 1853. He was educated in a monastery, which may have prompted the quasi-clerical garb he wore in later life—a style that earned him the name “the Bishop of Broadway.” He fled the monastery and joined a circus. By the age of 12 he was an actor on the San Francisco stage and had begun writing plays. In the following few years he joined companies barnstorming through the mining camps. In Virginia City, Nev., he served as secretary to Dion Boucicault, who inspired Belasco to try playwriting again. From 1873 to 1881 he was associated with several San Francisco theaters. His first play to attract attention was a collaborative effort with James A. Herne, Hearts of Oak. At 29 Belasco left for New York City, having acted more than 170 roles and written or adapted more than 100 plays.

His first position in New York was as a stagemanager of the Madison Square Theater. In 1886 he became dissatisfied and joined the Frohmans as stage manager and house playwright. In 1890 he became an independent producer; his first real success was his own The Heart of Maryland, a melodrama inspired by the poem “Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight.” Belasco took unknowns and turned them into stars. The first of these, Leslie Carter, had suffered through a sensational divorce. Penniless, a social outcast, she came to Belasco, who trained her and then stared her in Maryland. It played for three seasons and was then taken to London.

During the 1890s the Theatrical Syndicate gained control of the theatrical world and people who refused to join found themselves with no theaters. In Washington, D.C., Belasco was forced to rent the barnlike Convention Hall, leaky roof and all, for his production of Andrea with Carter. During the fourth act there was a violent rainstorm, and the audience observed the play from under their umbrellas. In 1902 Belasco gained control of the Republic Theater in New York. In 1906 he began work on a new building on West 44th Street, which eventually became the Belasco Theater.

In addition to Carter, Belasco elevated David Warfield (a vaudeville entertainer), Lenore Ulric, Frances Starr, and Blanche Bates to stardom. Most of these stars had natural ability, but Belasco was also a master at handling publicity campaigns. Certainly Carter’s past was in part responsible for her success. Belasco also preferred to work with unknown playwrights. He collaborated with John Luther Long to write Andrea, Madam Butterfly, and Darling of the Gods; and with Henry C. DeMille on Lord Chumley and The Wife, among others. Madam Butterfly and Belasco’s own The Girl of the Golden West were later adapted as the librettos for the Puccini operas.

Belasco claimed to have been associated with the production of nearly 400 plays, most of them written or adapted by himself; but his writing, in a time when Ibsen, Strindberg, and Chekhov were introducing realism, remained filled with sensational melodrama or maudlin sentiment. His plays have almost no lasting value. His advances in realism were in technical aspects of theater; his settings were correct to minute detail, for and not recreate a specific setting he preferred to buy it and then move it on stage. He particularly excelled in spectacular effect and in amazing mechanical contrivances. In lighting, he pioneered the use of colour silks and gelatin slides, loving to create “real” sunsets. Also, in a day when productions were hurriedly put together, Belasco took time to perfect his work; even his most severe critics admit a “tidiness” not often found on the American stage. He excelled in creating a mood and tension in his crowd and mob scenes. Moreover, whatever was seen on stage was Belasco and the other artists were the instruments of his will. He died in New York on May 14, 1931.