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A Rhetorical Analysis Of The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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Will Brown AP language and composition Mr. Schowalter September 11th, 2023 A rhetorical analysis of the first few pages of the great gatsby change the readers opinion on Nick and solidify him as a solid narrator. In F. Scott Fitzgerald's honest and critical novel, “The Great Gatsby”, Fitzgerald uses the first 3 pages as a way to introduce Nick Carraway's perspective to the readers, using Nicks reflection on his fathers advice about tolerance and judgment and how it has shaped his philosophy as a window into his mind. He used the message that Nick Carrway constantly reserved judgment and was an impartial narrator to define Nick's character and help the audience understand why he would be good for an exploration into the American dream and what …show more content…

The revelation of these integral themes through diction is the foundation for deeper understanding of characters as well as the many critiques that Fitzgerald makes towards the “modern society” of the time. Finally, the third rhetorical device Fitzgerald used in the opening of the book was personification. Nick says “The abnormal mind is quick to detect and attach itself to this quality when it appears in a normal person”, giving human traits to the “abnormal mind”. By personifying the mind, Fitzgerald suggests that certain tendencies in the brain actively seek out and latch onto people with particular qualities. This personification gets the idea across that unusual or unique perspectives can greatly impact social interaction in specific scenarios, which in the case of Nick should allow him to act as an “impartial” narrator. It also lays the foundation for future analysis of how normal people can be impacted by conditions of the “abnormal mind” and familiarizes the foreshadowing of the abnormal psyche possessed by many of the leading

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