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Significance Of Color In The Great Gatsby

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In the novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald color is used to describe the social classes in different places throughout the book. Fitzgerald displays the colors yellow, red, and green to describe the East egg as a wealthy, money-driven place full of broken people.
Old money and new money classes are important concepts of the novel and the relationship between the two is shown with the color yellow/gold. Throughout the book, the new money social class is trying to imitate or become the new money class. Gold is shown to be an effortless way of wealth. Daisy shows this behavior when she says, “‘Go ahead’, answered Daisy generally, ‘and if you want to take down any addresses here's my gold pencil’” (Fitzgerald 105). Fitzgerald is implying that Daisy has all this wealth at her fingertips without needing to work for it. The people who live in East egg have a desire or need for the gold color or wealth, whereas the West egg is trying to be like them but can’t and end up with a yellow color or less wealth which is explained throughout the book. …show more content…

Throughout the novel, we see red in the Buchanan’s home such as the mansion, and the rooms inside. It suggests the hostile relationship Daisy and Tom have towards each other. Fitzgerald writes the “crimson room”(Fitzgerald 6). Which could be a symbol of danger and hostility between anyone that could be in the Buchanan’s house. The red color illustrates danger and warning throughout the book and foreshadows the future as it connects with danger. Not only that but it also represents the damage in Tom and Daisy’s marriage that can only be fixed by covering it up with their

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