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Title: How does F. Scott Fitzgerald tell the story in chapter one of The Great Gatsby?
Description: AQA AS The Great Gatsby chapter one essay.
Description: AQA AS The Great Gatsby chapter one essay.
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How does F
...
Scott Fitzgerald tells the story using a variety of different features…
Fitzgerald tells The Great Gatsby from the perspective of Nick Carraway, an unusual choice of
narrator who tells his recount of events in retrospect, looking back at his ‘younger, more
vulnerable years’ this tells the reader from the off that he is, in his opinion-‐ wiser and older than
he was when the story is set, inferring that he is a reliable narrator and this idea is further
demonstrated when Carraway tells us that he is ‘inclined to reserve all judgments’
...
Carraway is quick to
bombard the reader with his credentials, which suggests that he is conscious of the reader
forming an opinion of him and wants to be liked and trusted by the reader
...
He says there was something
‘gorgeous’ about Gatsby, suggesting that we will get a very subjective account from Nick of what
the character of Jay Gatsby was like
...
Fitzgerald has also planted a curiosity in the reader as to what has exceeded Nick’s tolerance
...
It can be deduced that he is impressionable and he is described as
‘preyed’ on suggesting through no fault of his own his dreams were dashed
...
He is presented as an enigmatic character in chapter one, Fitzgerald includes
throwaway comments about Gatsby throughout the first chapter where Gatsby will be
mentioned and the subject will quickly change, this builds up suspense and makes the reader
want to carry on reading and desperate to meet him
...
Gatsby
...
Nick is
also made as a contrast to Gatsby and Tom as he can be seen as quite a boring character and so
the ‘great’ nature of Gatsby is made more apparent to the reader
...
This shows, with the
white of her dress emphasizing a pureness, which suggests a disconnection with the real world, a
life free from the dirt of hard work
...
Fitzgerald uses colours to represent ideas
and connotations in the novel such as the contrast in the Buchanans house of the red-‐
representing Tom’s aggression and status white-‐ Daisy’s isolation, innocence and purity
...
Nick in the opening of the book mentions that he lives in the ‘Less fashionable’ of the two eggs
(West Egg) however he also lives in a cardboard bungalow between Gatsby who represents the
new money and The Buchanans who represent the bourgeoisie, this shows the difference in
those who made their own money and those who were given it through birthright however Nick
also does not live with the working class people-‐ this means that he gives a more unbiased
account of events
...
Jordan remarks that Nick lives in
West Egg ‘contemptuously
...
Fitzgerald has laid the foundations for the rest of the story and created a sense of intrigue in the
reader through various devices he has planted in the novel
Title: How does F. Scott Fitzgerald tell the story in chapter one of The Great Gatsby?
Description: AQA AS The Great Gatsby chapter one essay.
Description: AQA AS The Great Gatsby chapter one essay.