F. Scott Fitzgerald's masterpiece "The Great Gatsby" can be understood as a criticism of capitalism. Fitzgerald creates a world where class and money are the essence of everyone's desire. The plotting and setting of the development event of "The Great Gatsby" is a perfect example of a capitalist structure consistent with a series of capitalism, enabling criticism of Marxist capitalists. Fitzgerald is neither Socialist nor Marxist, but he shows how Capitalism creates different alien society and alienates in his book.
Fitzgerald plays Nick Callow as a "Great Gatsby" narrator of "Great Gatsby" by putting corruption of people adopting superficial lifestyle with consistency of Nick Callaway. Compare the disillusionment of American dreams and criticize. When the caraway got accustomed to the life of Tom and Daisy Buchanan, Jordan Baker and Jay Gatsby, he noticed the erroneous temptation of the New York lifestyle, respecting the Midwest he left behind. "Fitzgerald not only needs to convey this criticism and not only uses the Callaway as a viewpoint role but also requires an objective narrator to use it as an immoral and wrongful counter example found by the Callaway in New Y I was doing.
"Great Gatsby" The disillusionment of Gatsby's "American dream" in the American dream is a frequently but importantly written theme in American literature. Fitzgerald's famous work "The Great Gatsby" is one of the most important masterpieces reflecting this theme. Scott Fitzgerald is best known for his novels and short stories that recorded the transition period of the American jazz era of the 1920s. His story of the 20th century classic Jay Gatsby examines and comments on the special situation of Gatsby.
Scott Fitzgerald's classic 20th century story on the quest of Daisy Buchanan by Great Gatsby, F. Jay Gatsby has reviewed and commented on Gatsby's special view on American dreams of the 1920s. The novel was created in 1925 and is a bridge between the First World War and the Great Depression in the early 1930s. Fitzgerald is a fanatic participant to the lifestyle of fanatical party and piano wine stereotype "groaning 20s", but he is also a savvy critic of his era. For Fitzgerald's "Jazz Age", "Great Gatsby" certainly makes people aware of the failure of society to realize that possibility.