The Great Gatsby Themes

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby explores the complexities of American society in the 1920s, highlighting the interplay between social classes and individual ambition. Through the life of Jay Gatsby, the novel examines themes of class privilege, moral decay, materialism, the influence of the past, the American dream, and love. Fitzgerald portrays a society in which wealth and status shape behavior, corrupt values, and constrain personal fulfillment, ultimately demonstrating how aspiration and desire collide with social realities, leading to tragedy.

References

Fitzgerald, F. (2007). The Great Gatsby. (M. Nowlin, Ed.). Broadview Press.

Mohammadi, A., & Mohammadi, A. (2020). The Great Gatsby: an ostensibly fulfilled dream in an unfulfilled society. International Journal of Science and Research, 9(5), 1196-1202.

Sun, Q. (2020). Study on stylistic effects of three-word clusters in The Great Gatsby from the perspective of corpus stylistics. International Journal of Applied Linguistics and English Literature, 9(4), 29. Web.

Wakefield, P. W. (2018). Catastrophe and decadence in The Great Gatsby. In D. J. Rosner (Ed.), Catastrophe and Philosophy (pp. 239-252). Lexington Books.

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