Here is the reading schedule for the rest of the week:
Wednesday - chapter 7
Thursday - chapter 8
Friday - chapter 9
Note, we also have some vocabulary words we should start looking at
1)
Wan
2)
Prodigality
3)
Feigned
4)
Languidly
5)
Colossal
6)
Complacency
7)
Levity
8)
Extemporizing
9)
Supercilious
10)
Infinitesimal
11)
Fractiousness
The Themes:
1.This novel is filled with multiple themes but the predominate one focuses on the death of the American Dream. This can be explained by how Gatsby came to get his fortune. Through his dealings with organized crime he didn't adhere to the American Dream guidelines. Nick also suggests this with the manner in which he talks about all the rich characters in the story. The immoral people have all the money. Of course looking over all this like the eyes of God are those of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg on the billboard.
1.This novel is filled with multiple themes but the predominate one focuses on the death of the American Dream. This can be explained by how Gatsby came to get his fortune. Through his dealings with organized crime he didn't adhere to the American Dream guidelines. Nick also suggests this with the manner in which he talks about all the rich characters in the story. The immoral people have all the money. Of course looking over all this like the eyes of God are those of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg on the billboard.
2.The second theme that needs to be
acknowledged is the thought of repeating the past. Gatsby's whole being
since going off to war is devoted to getting back together with Daisy
and have things be the way they were before he left. That's why Gatsby
got a house like the one Daisy used to live in right across the bay from
where she lives. He expresses this desire by reaching towards the green
light on her porch early in the book. The last paragraph, So we beat
on, boats against the current, born back ceaselessly into the past
reinforces this theme.
3.Fitzgerald was in his twenty's when he wrote
this novel and since he went to Princeton he was considered a spokesman
for his generation. He wrote about the third theme which is the
immorality that was besieging the 1920's. Organized crime ran rampant,
people were partying all the time, and affairs were common play. The
last of which Fitzgerald portrays well in this novel.
4.The eyes of
T. J. Eckleburg convey a fourth theme in this novel. George Wilson
compares them to the eyes of God looking over the valley of Ashes. The
unmoving eyes on the billboard look down on the Valley of Ashes and see
all the immorality and garbage of the times. By the end of the novel you
will realize that this symbolizes that God is dead.
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