The Great Gatsby Jay Gatsby Essay

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    Why Is Jay Gatsby Great

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    “He’s just a man named Gatsby.” (48) James Gatz or better known as Jay Gatsby, there was no official superlative his name until Nick Carraway added one. Gatsby only got the title of ‘great’ because Nick felt that he was obligated to do so. Being the only one who could make sense of conflict, Nick ended up with the burden of truth behind all three of the deaths that occurred in the story. As a result, he was able to see the unfair circumstances at which Gatsby had died. In addition, Nick, being partially

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    Money Money Money 47854 AP English Hagar 3/28/15 Jay Gatsby, an exotic millionaire philanthropist, has everything and anything a man could ever need. He lives a life most could only dream of. A life full of massive parties, sports cars, mansions, and booze. Yet he is missing something, he is missing the only thing that could make him truly happy, to live a life with Daisy Buchanan. "He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind

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    In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby provides the reader with a unique outlook on the life of the newly rich. Gatsby is an enigma and a subject of great curiosity, furthermore, he is content with a lot in life until he strives too hard. His obsession with wealth, his lonely life and his delusion allow the reader to sympathize with him. Initially, Gatsby stirs up sympathetic feelings because of his obsession with wealth. Ever since meeting Dan Cody, his fascination for wealth has

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    The Pathetic Jay Gatsby of The Great Gatsby       Pathetic is a term used to describe someone who is pitifully unsuccessful.  Success is not necessarily measured in wealth or fame, but it is measured by how much one has accomplished in life.  A successful person is one who has set many goals for himself and then goes out in life and accomplishes some of them, but goes on living even if failing on others.  In the novel The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby is a pathetic character

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    Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby is introduced as a newly prosperous man in hope to rekindle an old flame with his past love Daisy Buchanan. Despite the fact that Daisy has organized a life without Gatsby, a mother of a daughter also married to Tom Buchanan, Gatsby continues to attempt to revive their previous connection for one another. Gatsby completely alters his lifestyle by devoting every minute to expanding his wealth to gain Daisy’s satisfaction. Eventually Gatsby purchases a mansion

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    The Character of Jay Gatsby from The Great Gatsby Time tells us that success often comes with a price. Often money will create more problems than it can solve. The richness of a person’s soul can be hidden in the folds of money. Such is the case of Jay Gatsby. Jay Gatsby is constantly altering in the readers mind due to the various puzzling events that transpire in the novel creating a level of mystery. First off, Gatsby is a man who feels secure in his privacy and allows very few people

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    thinks of Gatsby as a “home wrecker” and a criminal. He cannot see any of Gatby’s virtues, but rather focuses on and exaggerates his questionable behavior (pursuing Daisy and bootlegging). Nick, on the other hand, sees both Gatsby’s virtues and faults and presents them to the reader from a neutral point of view. “Who is Gatsby anyhow?” demanded Tom suddenly.”Some big bootlegger?” (PG 104) • This quote reveals Tom’s suspicions of Gatsby’s wealth. Even though Tom doesn’t know that Gatsby is involved

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    character can be defined to be of noble status, but not necessarily virtuous. There is some aspect of his personality that he has in great abundance but it is this that becomes his tragic flaw and leads to his ultimate demise. However, his tragic ending should not simply sadden the reader, but teach him or her a life lesson. In The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby is the tragic hero who portrays the corruption of the American dream through his tragic flaw. His devastating death at the end

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    The Great Gatsby is known to have religious symbolism embedded in the text, from God figures to Deism and Christianity. Fitzgerald brings light to Gatsby’s humanity and God figure by creating two versions of him in the text: Gatz and Gatsby. However, which version is real, and which is a failed manifestation of the other? It is evident in the text that the real version, or person, is in fact James Gatz. Jay Gatsby is only a gilded version of James Gatz, created by the mind of a seventeen year-old

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    in the novel never know who Jay Gatsby was, many people looked up to him as a great man with good intensions. The novel Great Gatsby is about Jay Gatsby’s undying love for Daisy Buchanan. The narrator Nick Carraway, Daisy’s cousin and Gatsby’s neighbor, helps reconnect Gatsby and Daisy after nearly five years apart. After five years Daisy is married to Tom Buchanan and has a daughter named Pam. Clearly in F. Scoot Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Gatsby is truly is great because when he throws parties

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