The Great GatsbyFor use in schools and libraries only. A young man, newly rich, tries to recapture the past and win back his former love, despite the fact that she is married. |
Contents
Survey | 1 |
The Formalist Approach | 9 |
The Diamond as Big as the Ritz and The Rich Boy | 22 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
accept Alger American dream argues attitude becomes believe Bewley Bruccoli Buchanan Callahan capacity for wonder Carraway Carraway's clock Cody Conrad considered contemporary contrast corrupt critical debate cynical Daisy's Dan Cody Diamond as Big East Eble Eckleburg embodies emphasized evidence examine example fact Fiction figure final paragraphs formalist formula fiction Gatsby represents Gatsby's character Gatsby's dream Gatsby's failure Gatsby's father Gatsby's parties glamour hair Hoffman idea ideals illusion innocence Jordan Baker Last Tycoon Lehan Lockridge 1968 lost Matthew Bruccoli Miller Mizener moral Myrtle Wilson Myrtle's mystery mythic narrative narrator Nick's novel O'Kelly Perosa perspective point of view reader regain Daisy relation relevance repeat the past repr Rich Boy Romantic sailors Scott Fitzgerald sense short stories Side of Paradise Snows of Kilimanjaro social society Stallman suggests supposedly symbol T.S. Eliot technique Tom Buchanan Tom's Trimalchio Waste Land wealth West Egg Winter Dreams Wolfsheim woman women writing wrote Zelda