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; The Great Gatsby; Chapter Four ; ... The juxtaposition of these two remarks was startling. Gatsby answered for me. 'Oh, no,' he exclaimed, 'this isn't the man!' ; 'No?' Mr. Wolfshiem seemed disappointed. 'This is just a friend. I told you we'd talk about that some other time.' ;
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www.fcps.edu/westspringfieldhs/academic/english/1projec...
www.fcps.edu/westspringfieldhs/academic/english/1project/99gg/99gg6/chap4.htm
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The motif of the weather being a symbol of the story’s mood has long been used literature, and is clear in The Great Gatsby. ... Although Fitzgerald uses the weather for juxtaposition, he uses it for more than just that, as it also coincides with a present mood. Following a few chapters, when Gatsby decides to meet Daisy,
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bookstove.com/classics/tempest-and-sunshine-in-the-grea...
bookstove.com/classics/tempest-and-sunshine-in-the-great-gatsby/
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Myrtle's party in chapter two and Gatsby's party at the start of chapter three of The Great Gatsby are one example of Fitzgerald's use of juxtaposition to contrast the two atmospheres. Some of these contrasting ideas include the difference in the two hosts' lifestyles and wealth.
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www.directessays.com/viewpaper/19276.html
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Does anybody know anything about Juxtaposition and how it pertains to the novel The Great Gatsby? ... [ Western Canon University Commons] [ Western Canon University Lecture Halls] fitzgerald Juxtaposition in the Great Gatsby: Nantucket Campfire...
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killdevilhill.com/fitzgeraldchat/messages2/237.html
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In this paper, I will prove that the novel The Great Gatsby shows the American Dream as a corrupt idea. My proof will be based upon the juxtaposition of Jay Gatsby's and Myrtle Wilson's deaths, the wealth of Jay Gatsby and his desire for Daisy, and the immoral actions of the characters in this novel.
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www.echeat.com/essay.php?t=32269
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Morals and American Idealism in The Great Gatsby ; ... this book what it is includes juxtaposition, between Tom's and Gatsby's ; parties, using flashbacks to reveal Gatsby's background, and a descriptive ; style especially when Fitzgerald is trying to create a mood. Overall, this book made me think of my own moral values as...
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www.123helpme.com/view.asp?id=16621
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An Essay on the novel The Great Gatsby, a novel by F.Scott Fitzgerald ... The author lived in this ‘privileged’ sector of society yet, ironically, his most well known work, The Great Gatsby, seems to be a satire about this entire existence.
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www.angelfire.com/journal2/englishresource/gatsby.html
www.angelfire.com/journal2/englishresource/gatsby.html
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An Examination of the Juxtaposition of Midwestern and Eastern Values and Attitudes in The Great Gatsby ... It is with this background that I approached my first reading of The Great Gatsby, and it was due to this background that I came to feel an intense pity for the shallow, self-absorbed characters in this novel.
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wanderlust64.tripod.com/gatsby.html
wanderlust64.tripod.com/gatsby.html
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F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby (1926) is, at first sight, a novel about love, idealism and disillusionment. However, ... There are also issues to do with the way in which the novel is put together, its juxtaposition of scenes dramatising important events and brief passages of commentary and interpretation.
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www.newi.ac.uk/rdover/between/gatsby.htm
www.newi.ac.uk/rdover/between/gatsby.htm
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