The Contrastive Techniques in The Great Gats英语专业毕业论文.doc
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1、The Contrastive Techniques in The Great GatsbyAbstract The Great Gatsby, with its depiction of “the Jazz Age”, marks the highest point of F. Scott Fitzgeralds artistic achievement. T. S. Eliot once concluded that it was the “first step that American fiction has taken since Henry James”. In this nove
2、l, the author successfully employed the contrastive techniques, which endow the novel with artistic glamour and profound connotation. This paper intends to illustrate the contrastive techniques in terms of scenes, characters as well as dream and reality. The significance of these contrasts lies in t
3、he fact that they help the readers to have a better understanding of the Jazz Age, the personalities of the main characters and the American dream. The careful deliberate employment of contrastive techniques not only testify to Fitzgeralds craftsmanship in planning and developing the novel, but also
4、 contribute a great deal to the reveal of the tragic theme, that is, the disillusion of American dream.Key Words contrast, scene, character, dream, reality 1 IntroductionF. Scott Fitzgeralds masterpiece The Great Gatsby shows us a vivid picture of the 1920s with its superficial prosperity and underl
5、ying sadness. The failure of American dream and the crisis of value are well reflected in characters and the details of the novel. In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald skillfully employed the contrastive techniques in terms of scenes, characters as well as dream and reality. These techniques not only dee
6、pen the tragic theme, but also imparted the text a brand-new interpretation and profound artistic glamour. 2 The employment of contrastive techniques2.1 The contrast of scenesThe author gives us a vivid description of various scenes in the novel, among which the most impressive are the sharp contras
7、t between Gatsbys parties and his funeral and the strong contradicts between the east and the west. These two pairs of contrastive scenes foreshadow Gatsbys tragical destination.2.1.1 The parties vs. the funeralThe Jazz Age is a time of broken dream, a time of flapper, a time of changes and a time o
8、f financial boom. Its clearly reflected in the description of Gatsbys parties. These parties are fashionable, but pointless. It is only a show-off of Gatsbys riches and material success. The crowds hardly know their host; many come and go without invitation. The music, the laughter and the faces, al
9、l blurred as one confused mass, show the purposelessness and the loneliness of the party-goers beneath their marks of relaxation and joviality. All this is typical of “the Jazz Age”, when many people lose belief in American dream and indulge themselves in drinking and dancing. The great expectations
10、 which the first settlement of the American continent brings vanish, and so despair and doom set in.In his blue gardens, men and girls came and went like moths among the whisperings and the champagne and the stars.On week-ends his Rolls-Royce became an omnibus, bearing parties to and from the city b
11、etween nine in the morning and long past midnight, while his station wagon scampered like a brisk yellow bug to meet all trains. And on Mondays eight servants, including an extra gardener, toiled all day with mops and scrubbing-brushes and hammers and garden-shears, repairing the ravages of the nigh
12、t before. Every Friday five crates of oranges and lemons arrived from a fruiterer in New York-every Monday these same oranges and lemons left his back door in a pyramid of pulpless halves.” (Chapter 3, 52) The exavagent life, the noisy people constitute Gatsbys parties. However, the depiction of the
13、 fashionable and meaningless parties serves to highlight Gatsbys tragedy by contrasting the grandeur of his party with his violent death, with the frustration of his dream. Gatsbys funeral is rather deserted and cheerless compared with his parties. Its a record of human coldness. Nick has invited so
14、me people to come to Gatsbys funeral. These people are all Gatsbys so-called friends. They find a lot of excuses for their absence because they know clearly that Gatsby is no longer useful for them. Gatsbys generous parties have not brought him even one friend. Whats more, Daisy, once Gatsbys lover,
15、 the real killer, “hadnt sent a message or a flower”.(Chapter 9, 233)The sharp contrast between the exavagence of the parties and the coldness of the funeral reveals the hypocritical relationship among people and the moral degradation of the Jazz Age.2.1.2 The East vs. the West In one sense, the mor
16、al conflict in the novel is resolved into a conflict between East and West-the ancient and corrupt East and the raw but virtuous West. Nick attributes his moral attitude to his Middle Western background. Nicks experience in the East results in his return with relief to the West: “After Gatsbys death
17、, the East was haunted for me like that, distorted beyond my eyes power of correction. So when the blue smoke of brittle leaves was in the air and the wind blew the wet laundry stiff on the line, I decided to come back home.”(Chapter 9, 236) “Home”, it seems clear, is a place where the fundamental d
18、ecencies are observed and virtue is honored. The East is a representation of sophistication and moral degradation while the West is the embodiment of virtue and harmony. In the novel, the author fabricated the East Egg and the West Egg whose geographical contrast shows the conflicts of different val
19、ues.Their physical resemblance must be a source of perpetual confusion to the gulls that fly overhead. To the wingless a more arresting phenomenon is their dissimilation in every particularexcept shape and size. (Chapter 1, 6)The Buchanans live in white palaces of fashionable East Egg while Gatsby a
20、nd Nick who comes to New York to deal with bond business live in less fashionable West Egg. East Egg is a paradise for upper-class society. Its more degraded and amoral. However, West Egg symbolizes hope, promise and reinvigoration.2.2 The contrast of main charactersIn The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald s
21、uccessfully delineated many impressive characters such as Gatsby, Tom, Nick, Daisy, Wilson, and etc. The contrast of their character and personality is striking in this novel, among which the contrast between Gatsby and Tom, between Nick and Gatsby are especially noticeable.Gatsby is sensitive and i
22、dealistic, almost divine in his dedication to his love and faith. Although his wealth came from his criminal activities, Gatsby manages to hold the readers sympathy throughout. The whole-hearted dedication of Gatsby and his sincere belief in what he does make him heroic, and this submerges the unple
23、asant details so that they dont seem important in the final outcome.Compared with Gatsby, Tom is sinister and sly. “They are careless people,” as Nick describes them, “Tom and Daisy-they smashed up things and creature and then retreated back into their money or their carelessness, or whatever it was
24、 that kept them together and let other people clean up the mess-they had made.” Tom is more sophisticated. When he finds that things are not moving to his favor, he is determined to arrange things to suit himself, no matter whom he hurts in the process. When he finds out Gatsbys interest in his wife
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