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Essay on the Great Gatsbysuper notes |
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This is the first 1,000 characters of 24352 words (97.41 pages) in the essay titled the Great Gatsbysuper notes
Have you ever felt that there were two of you battling for control of the person you call yourself? Have you ever felt that you weren t quite sure which one you wanted to be in charge? All of us have at least two selves: one who wants to work hard, get good grades, and be successful; and one who would rather lie in the sun and listen to music and daydream. To understand F. Scott Fitzgerald, the man and the writer, you must begin with the idea of doubleness, or twoness.
Fitzgerald himself said in a famous series of essays called The Crack Up, the test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function. Everything about Fitzgerald is touched by this idea. For example, he both loved and hated money. He was attracted to the life of the very rich as an outsider who had very little, and at the same time he hated the falseness and hypocrisy and cruelty of their lives. He was disciplined, knowing that he had to have great mental and physical self-control to succeed as a writer, but he was often unable to exercise those very qualities he knew he would need in order to succeed. He loved his wife Zelda more than anything in his life, and yet he hated her for destroying his talent. Part of him lived a dazzling life full of parties, gaiety, and show; and part of him knew that this sort of life was a complete sham.
All of this doubleness Fitzgerald puts into the novel you are about to read: The Gr...
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Keywords: f scott fitzgerald, jay gatsby, great gatsby, nick carraway, novel, listen to music, hypocrisy, gaiety, crack up, one you wanted, physical self, sort of life, daydream, self control, sham, narrator, outsider, dreamer
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