Hôtel De Ville In Normandy Analysis

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Famed author, F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby during the early 1920s, a period post-World War I of great riches and prevalent immorality. The renowned novel focuses on the newly rich Jay Gatsby’s attempt to win back an old love of his, Daisy Buchanan. The 1920s were frivolous in nature, full of lavish parties and the pursuit of “The American Dream”. Through The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald explores the gross glorification of “The American Dream” to expose the truth behind the American 1920s, thereby freeing the reader from the distorted image of wealth ubiquitously shown throughout this period of American history. Fitzgerald initially implicates the idealization of wealth through his description of Gatsby’s house, telling of the mansion to be a “colossal affair” reminiscent of “some Hôtel de Ville in Normandy,” and proceeding to mention the stately home’s “marble swimming pool” and “forty acres of lawn” (5). Fitzgerald hyperbolizes the house’s grandiosity by alluding to the colossus and the impressive stature of the house, as well as drawing comparison to Hôtel de Ville in Normandy, a building known for its impressive architecture and imposing structure. The account of the blatant and obscene display of wealth Gatsby exhibits moves to illustrate an extremely romanticized version of his life, focusing purely on the glitz and glamor of the 1920s. Correspondingly, Fitzgerald moves to tell of one of Gatsby’s infamous parties, …show more content…
Throughout The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald utilizes various tones, hyperboles, and syntax to convey to the reader how “The American Dream” proves to be nothing more than fabricated happiness overlaying the inky bareness of the real