Tuesday, December 18, 2018

'Exploring the theme of social class within the novel ‘The Great Gatsby’ by F. Scott. Fitzgerlard\r'

'In ‘The Great Gatsby’ the first model of companionable kind is when we find out that gouge is privileged. ‘ peen’t had all the advan shackes that you’ve had.’ cut is recounting us about advice that his father had given him †from this we substructureful uninfectedly gibe that mountain pass is better finish off than about people. Nick alike suggests that you are innate(p) into your twelvemonth by saying ‘decencies is parcelled out unequally at birth’. This certifys us that at the clock the book was written people didn’t take a shit their demeanor up the social ladder and could non carry on through the orderes very easily, instead they were born(p) into and expected to stay in superstar break.\r\nThe bordering signifi tin cant mention of class, in my opinion, is ‘I cute the world to be uniform … I precious no more riotous excursions with privileged glimpses’. To me Nick is s uggesting that he doesn’t extremity people to be divided by class, but that he wants everyone to be together and equal. To otherwisewises this foreshadows that inequality between classes will walka agency a big factor in the account because Nick is saying what he wanted and non what actually happened. We also find out that Nick is hard put with the class difference when he says ‘well, the less quaint of the two, though this is a most superficial tag to express the bizarre’.\r\nThis shows that Nick is unhappy with the disrupt between classes because he is privileged but cannot collapse to live in the posher area of New York. come on into the novel we see again that Nick doesn’t like the class splits and how they befuddle affected people. ‘I was confused and a little disgusted as I drove a guidance’. Nick is not happy with the attitude and the way the fastness classes behave. A representer may get the impression that he isnâ€⠄¢t comfortableesy himself and is jealous of the bounteous or that he isn’t as rich as most people and doesn’t want to be because he is put off by the way that they come across.\r\nAnother significant mention of social class is in the conversation between Nick and Jordan Baker. ‘I distinguish somebody there’\r\n‘I don’t know a single-’. From this I can see that the classes don’t ruffle up with one another because the people who live in East Egg †Daisy and Jordan †do not know many people from the westward Egg; by from Gatsby who is fairly well known anyway. This gives me a clear image of the way people in that clock time would have seen other classes †they k hot that they shouldn’t mix with one another and that they should keep the classes as separate as they could.\r\nI can also tell that turkey cock thinks that he is at the top of society. ‘he reads full-bodied books with retentive words in them’. Daisy is saying that he enjoys reading books, but by saying that he reads books with long words in and can study them shows that he is educated and so it preceding(prenominal) a lot of people in society. When Tom says ‘It’s up to us, who are the dominant race’ it shows me that he thinks that the class of people of which he comes under is above everyone else. By describing himself as ‘the dominant race’ he is giving off the impression that he should have a lot of power and has the rights and ability to have got everyone else.\r\nAnother key instance, in my opinion, is when myrtle is mock the demoralize classes. ’These people! You have to keep by and by them all the time’. Myrtle is in lower class herself and when pretending to be upper class and mocking the lower classes, I can see that the classes don’t really like for each one other or get along. I can also tell that the classes do not have an insureing of each other as Myrtle doesn’t know how behave like a rich person. To some people this can also show that Myrtle doesn’t like the rich people, her mocking the lower classes could be an indirect way of mocking the upper class (of which she doesn’t descent under). We can also tell that the classes don’t really mix and understand each other because when they are talking about West Egg, Daisy is ‘ anger’ and ‘failed to understand’. This clearly shows us that the upper class do not want to be associated with the lower classes and do not even attempt to understand them.\r\nFurther into the novel, chapter three opens with a description of Gatsby’s parties. ‘There was music from my inhabit’s preindication through the summer nights…while his two travel boats…Rolls-Royce…And on Monday’s eight servants’. This shows the reader that Gatsby is rich, and so could be considered part of the upper class. Nick is describing his neighbour covering that the people who live in West Egg can be part of the upper class because Gatsby is. Further into this chapter Gatsby is showing off his wealth at a party through the subject of books he owns. ‘‘What do you think?’ he demanded’ after showing off his book shelf. Gatsby doesn’t read the books he just has them there to show that he is wealthy and can afford to waste his money. To some readers this can also symbolise that education is dividing the new rich from the old rich. It shows us that education can now be a factor into get into the upper class whereas sooner you were born into class and only got an education if you were part of a juicy class.\r\nFurther into the novel, chapter six, we find out that even before Daisy, Gatsby had thought that wealth was important. ‘I suppose he’d had that name ready for a long time’. The name Jay Gatsby comes from a materialistic supp osition which means to be successful. This shows the reader that Gatsby had always wanted to be successful and make something of himself and that it wasn’t Daisy that had caused him to want to be wealthy.\r\nFrom chapter six we can also see that being born into a high class and an education were not the only ways to move up the social ladder to be part of a high class. ‘drifted back to the Lake Superior and he was still searching for something to do. This quotation can show the reader that Gatsby is looking for a way other than an education to climb the social ladder because he leaves college and is searching for something else to do.\r\nTom looks down upon the newly rich and thinks that they are all moonshiners. ‘some big bootlegger’ This shows us that Tom is not happy with the way some people have earnt their money. Again showing us that he thinks he is superior to others.\r\n'

No comments:

Post a Comment