Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Great Gatsby Style Analysis
Fitzgerald's poignantly bittersweet tone contrasts and illustrates the irony that our society once began as a "new" and "fresh" world, but we all continued to watch it fall and crumble before us. America prior to discovery and growing population was a glorious world, however after people became known and aware of their desire for it the overall landscape and picture of the land changed. The diction used throughout the passage reflects the drastic change between early life in the 1920's and the world today. The author uses words like "fresh," "green," and "borne" that describes how innocent and new America was prior to people discovering it. The "inessential houses" and trees were abudant until America's desire for new land became greater than their desire for peaceful and visually pleasing landscapes. However, after the "brooding," "orgastic" discoverers decided to come and destroy the calming environment.
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