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  1. Apr 15, 2021 · The novel has been highly praised for its prose style, and the deft way Fitzgerald handles the voice of his narrator, Nick Carraway. So let’s take a closer look at just the first three paragraphs of The Great Gatsby, the opening lines, and offer a textual analysis of their meaning. We have analysed the novel itself here.

  2. It is stressed that Gatsby’s military career was one of the keys to his social advancement. The continuing involvement of America in armed conflict signals the failure of an early American ideal, the aspiration to be a peaceful nation.

  3. Characters. Symbols. Quotes. Detailed Summary. Nick Carraway, the protagonist and narrator, starts The Great Gatsby by sharing a lesson his dad taught him: not to judge others, as most haven't had the privileges and opportunities he's had.

    • Style
    • Setting
    • Plot

    The narrator of The Great Gatsby is a young man from Minnesota named Nick Carraway. He not only narrates the story but casts himself as the books author. He begins by commenting on himself, stating that he learned from his father to reserve judgment about other people, because if he holds them up to his own moral standards, he will misunderstand th...

    In the summer of 1922, Nick writes, he had just arrived in New York, where he moved to work in the bond business, and rented a house on a part of Long Island called West Egg. Unlike the conservative, aristocratic East Egg, West Egg is home to the new rich, those who, having made their fortunes recently, have neither the social connections nor the r...

    Nick is unlike his West Egg neighbors; whereas they lack social connections and aristocratic pedigrees, Nick graduated from Yale and has many connections on East Egg. One night, he drives out to East Egg to have dinner with his cousin Daisy and her husband, Tom Buchanan, a former member of Nicks social club at Yale. Tom, a powerful figure dressed i...

  4. Need help with Chapter 1 in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby? Check out our revolutionary side-by-side summary and analysis.

  5. The Great Gatsby (Chapter I) F. Scott Fitzgerald. Track 1 on The Great Gatsby. One of the most famous openings in all of literature, the first chapter of The Great Gatsby introduces the...

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  7. Mar 30, 2021 · A Summary and Analysis of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University) The Great Gatsby is the quintessential Jazz Age novel, capturing a mood and a moment in American history in the 1920s, after the end of the First World War.