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Description: English Literature (A2/A-Level) essay on The Great Gatsby for the question - "‘One of the main themes of the novel is how illusion is mistaken for reality’ To what extent and in what ways does this fit with your understanding of the novel’s main concerns"
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POINT –
EVIDENCE QUESTION
–
‘One of the main themes of the novel is how illusion is mistaken for reality’
To what extent and in what ways does this fit your understanding of the novel’s main concerns
The Great Gatsby is greatly founded on the
dichotomy of illusion versus reality
...
The illusions of wealth and beauty veil the decadence and the darker human nature, hiding the
ugliness within the grand and gorgeous mansions
...
Underlying these illusions is the questioning of the narrator’s reliability and its impact on what
we perceive to be reality and illusion
...
However, that is not the case
...
Therefore, Daisy’s contribution was the trigger, the green light of
hope that symbolized his goal of selffulfillment, reinforcing the prospect that if all the
requirements to be one of her people were crossed off his list, then she would inevitably be a
part of his reality
...
This lead to the common phrase “old sport” that
he picked up from his time with Dan Cody, who was an idol of his, and the possession of the
enormous mansion across the bay from Daisy
...
Our
perception of Gatsby is greatly, if not completely, founded on Nick’s portrayal of him and this is
where the reliability of the narrator comes into the reader’s differentiation between illusion and
reality
...
It is also a great flaw of Nick’s that once he believes an idea
about Gatsby, he refuses to accept or allow whatever makes his idol appear in a less flattering
light, implying there’s much more about Gatsby that we may not know because of Nick’s,
conscious or subconscious, attempts to maintain the image
...
His love for her presents itself as authentic however he has successfully
built this deeply rooted deception into believing that once they meet again and she is aware of
the man that he has become, everything will be rekindled just as he envisioned
...
He is very mathematical in his approach to this relationship and seems to
wholeheartedly believe that the sum of his wealth and his love for her will undoubtedly result in
her immediately choosing him over Tom, additionally without as much of a comment on her
daughter’s place in this desperate mess that resulted from his push for perfection
...
But I believe that that is an illusion that the reader is led to believe that allows us, and our
narrator, to believe that had human nature not interfered just a little too much, everything will go
just as planned and that is not true because Daisy herself is portrayed as a human illusion as
we only hear about her past from those around her and hardly get to know her outside of the
public’s romanticized idea of her
...
The dark reality is veiled by the glamour of the idea of the possibility and
Gatsby has a fraction of a moment where despite Daisy’s physical presence with him, he finds
himself looking out across the bay at the green light and the count of his enchanted objects
diminishes by one
...
Lastly, the fact that he pursues, with every ounce of his being, the reality he feels is attainable in
order to, more or less, achieve the American Dream and yet is revoked access to the very
exclusive lifestyle he built his whole life around breaks down the illusion of the Dream
...
This
great and heated presentation of the deterioration of the illusion of the American Dream
would’ve spoken words of far more weight to the contemporary audience of the novel as it
eluded that the Dream most were chasing, including Fitzgerald himself, was unattainable and
there is no way of accomplishing such a dream unless you were born right into it
...
This discrepancy in belief is potentially what drives Daisy away from making the decision
because in order to face the illusions and accept them for what they are one must face that they
believe in them or have lived according to their rules and regulations
...
Overall, the reader relies on Nick’s portrayal and his ability to distinguish between illusions and
reality in addition to his integrity
...
The fact that
the main theme of the novel is the istaking of illusion for reality
m
makes the novel out to be a
warning for anybody chasing an illusion as it will all turn to mist and one will find themselves
alone and without much to show for the lives they led in oblivion
Description: English Literature (A2/A-Level) essay on The Great Gatsby for the question - "‘One of the main themes of the novel is how illusion is mistaken for reality’ To what extent and in what ways does this fit with your understanding of the novel’s main concerns"