Monday, March 5, 2012

Final Gatsby Post

-Why does Fitzgerald refer back to the green light in the final page? What significance does the light hold?
Ø  The light is green to represent envy and most simply Gatsby's dream of having Daisy once more; a yearning which took over his being and dictated his every move. This venture was disastrous for everyone involved: Myrtle got ran over, Daisy ran over Myrtle, and Gatsby got shot in head. Obviously Fitz. is trying to tell us something about holding onto extravagant dreams far too long. Fitz. refers back to the light in the second to last paragraph to ensure that the audience does not lose sight of the story's theme that the past is the past and cannot be recreated no matter how desperately one wishes.

-How effective was Miss Baker as a character in general?
Ø  Miss Baker served as a counter example to Daisy, Gatsby, and Tom in that unlike the lot of them she is able to let go of the past, or at least the illusion of the past that everybody else seems so enamored with. Nick tells the audience this directly in one of the latter chapters but we also see this trait when she and Nick part ways. She does seem to be still love Nick but has chosen to move on, even telling him that she is engaged to a new man. Through this she serves her purpose and therefore is an effective character.

-What is Fitzgerald's purpose of putting Nick and Gatsby on West Egg and Tom and Daisy on East Egg?
Ø  It has been said that Nick and Gatsby represent different aspects of Fitz’s own personality. Nick the even headed, slow to action personality and Gatsby the celebrity consumed by the idea of wealth and riches personality. To illustrate this they are put on the same island. So to put them on the same island, right next to each other would have been fitting to convey how they represent different parts of the same person. They lived so close to each other and were described in such a manner that I began to see their properties and lives as being connected.

-How effectively does Fitzgerald use Gatsby to get across his ideas about dreams and living in them?
Ø  The grandness of Gatsby that all too quickly becomes the tragedy of Gatsby serves as a very effective method of expressing the dangers of always trying to recreate a glorified past. It is revealed that Gatsby’s life after the war was a plan to win back the heart of Daisy, a plan that went horridly awry. At first Gatsby seems like a very grand, mysterious creature who rivals God himself but as the novel progresses it becomes all too easy to see that truly he is a sorry individual trapped in an unattainable idea. This painting of him as a tragic figure makes him a very effective vehicle for Fitzgerald to drive his theme right into our heads.

1 comment:

  1. Very nice questions overall, thought-provoking and detailed. Your answers are strong as well. I like that you are comfortable enough twith the author to call him "Fitz." remember to use quotes when possible.

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