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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines the novel’s protagonists and antagonists and how their characteristics put them in conflict; a description of this conflict and how it develops the action; considers how this conflict stems from contrasting ideas or values; examines the major characters’ dilemmas and how they are dealt with; whether or not they achieve their major goals; the many obstacles in their path to achieving these goals; whether the characters are happy/unhappy, satisfied/dissatisfied, changed or the same, enlightened or ignorant, and how the resolution of these major conflicts produced these results. No additional sources are used.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGgr8gat.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
dealt with; whether or not they achieve their major goals; the many obstacles in their path to achieving these goals; whether the characters are happy/unhappy, satisfied/dissatisfied, changed or the same,
enlightened or ignorant, and how the resolution of these major conflicts produced these results. No additional sources are used. TGgr8gat.rtf Plot & Conflict Analysis of F. Scott
Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby , For - July 2001 -- properly! If ever
there was a novel that characterized the 1920s, it was F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby. It was a flawless representation of art imitating life. America was in
a period of transition, conflicted by old-world values being overtaken by new and often shocking attitudes of social permissiveness. After World War I, people felt restless and compelled to
expand their own personal horizons. They believed the American Dream was there for the taking, and once it was possessed, their lives would be filled with happiness and meaning.
The time that became forever known as "The Jazz Age" was characterized by transitory pleasure-seeking and a collective search for identity. It was what Charles Dickens referred to
as "the best of times and the worst of times" -- those of hope and optimism, but also of disillusionment and despair. It was extremes of the 1920s and
the inevitable conflicts which generated the plot and fueled the action of The Great Gatsby. Although F. Scott Fitzgerald, along with his contemporary Ernest Hemingway, was one of the pioneers
of the American modernist literary movement, The Great Gatsby featured the binary or dual plot structure which was popular during the Romantic era of the previous century. There was,
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