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Great Gatsby: Location To Segregate Social Classes

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Kira Parra Ms. Pruitt PDP English 2 – P.3 1 March 2016 Great Gatsby - Seminar Questions 1. Fitzgerald uses location to segregate the social classes by putting the different social classes into different parts of the city to emphasize where poor and rich live. Examples of this separation are West Egg and East Egg this is where the wealthy live. West Egg being the side that signifies Old Money, while East Egg is the side that signifies New Money. Another example would be the Valley of Ashes, the people living here is the poor and working class and although may be extremely hard working are seen as the very lowest social status. Nick Caraway said “The one on my right was a colossal affair by any standard—it was a factual imitation of some Hotel …show more content…

From the choices given from the social classes given from The Great Gatsby I would choose to be a part of the Nouveau Riche. The main reason I chose this is because Nouveau Riche is a term defined as the rich people who worked for their money and had the “audacity” to work for their money instead of having it inherited by distant family or in a not hard working manor. I would choose this because I believe in working for what you deserve and receiving what you worked for. "I thought you inherited your money.” "I did, old sport," he said automatically, "but I lost most of it in the big panic – the panic of the war."(Fitzgerald 97-103). I used this quote as textual evidence to put Gatsby in this category. Although he initially inherited his money he lost it all left to regain it …show more content…

Gatsby’s downfall all began when he met daisy and realized money is what she was looking for. Not a war hero and not someone who wasn’t impressive. Gatsby had a tendency to lie about most things. Including this impressive persona he put up for Daisy to see. “He ran over Myrtle like you'd run over a dog and never even stopped his car. There was nothing I could say, except the one unutterable fact that it wasn't true.”(Fitzgerald 178) This quote is relevant to this topic because he lied for Daisy. Daisy caused his downfall from the start. He was hopelessly in love with someone unattainable. Someone he couldn’t possibly had, yet he tried so hard to attain her. He lied, went into a dirty business, had parties every night to have the chance to impress this girl that didn’t and wouldn’t leave an undeserving man for

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