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# 2: Diction
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Throughout The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald utilizes elegant and over-the-top
diction that portrays the high-class society that belongs to the “Egg”
divisions. Nick Carraway, the narrator, displays his formal diction when he describes
Jay Gatsby: "The truth was that Jay
Gatsby, of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of
himself. He was a son of God—a phrase which, if it means anything, means just
that—and he must be about His Father’s business, the service of a vast, vulgar,
and meretricious beauty” (95). The words “platonic” and “meretricious” connote
a sense of higher education that the aristocracy of the time would say to
establish a tone of utmost superiority. The word meretricious describes itself,
gaudy and flashy and bogus. The language used clearly reflects the different
social classes, as they differentiate between the levels of wealth.
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Fitzgerald successfully
creates a negative atmosphere when describing the valley of ashes. He not only
employs diction, but he also incorporates figurative language to depict the
devastation that is the valley of ashes. As Nick drives from East Egg to West
Egg, he sees the valley of ashes and describes it as being a “grotesque garden”
(19). The juxtaposition of grotesque gardens creates negating connotations. The
narrator is painting the picture of a desolate, hideous garden that is
essentially dividing two types of aristocracy (the East and West Egg). This
further reveals Nick’s outward disdain towards this land that is left degraded
by the industrial, urban society that is in moral decay.
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The female primary
protagonist is Daisy Buchanan, who eventually has an affair with Gatsby. Gatsby,
as would any male be, has a natural affinity towards her, most likely caused by
her voice that can be so enticing. Jay Gatsby describes her voice as being “full
of money” (118). Stating that she is full of money has a positive connotation,
as it creates the image that her voice chimes and clinks while exposing her
obsession with wealth. Fitzgerald typifies her in this way to show why Gatsby
constantly tries to impress her with parties that display his wealth.
Furthermore, her mouth full of money lends itself to a sense, or tone, of
assurance that she is financially stable and has high ranks on the societal
level.
The contrasting diction you provided effectively illustrates the narrator's intention of differentiating between the West Egg and East Egg classes. Making it seem that everything regarding West Egg is "grotesque" further creates a gap between those sorts of people and people like Daisy, who have voices "full of money." It is an ongoing theme in Gatsby that the author places the differences between east and west egg folks side-by-side; however, he also alludes to the fact that, in reality, the two divisions are not that different from one another. The theme of upper-class elegance, or just the opposite of it, is prevalent and serves to characterize the beliefs of the day--that "new" money is of lower status than "old" money.
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