The 1920s was an era of social and technological change. After the Second World War, the Victorian values were ignored, the consumption of alcohol increased and the era of modernism continued. "Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald shows perfectly the rotten ethics of the 20th century. Fitzgerald will use the characters in the novel, in particular Buchanan, Jordan Baker, Gatsby party, to express the theme of social morality. Tom Buchanan embodies the emergence of moral uncertainty in the era of modernism.
At first sight F. Scott Fitzgerald's "Great Gatsby" may look like a love story of unrequited love. However, a cautious survey shows that the work is more than that. "Great Gatsby" is a story about "American dream", sometimes about moral corruption that occurs when pursuing dreams. American dreams are said to pursue happiness while maintaining a strong moral value. - A dreamer's heart is a deep collection of personal vision that demonstrates the greatest hope for the most complex nightmare. They just imagine more than ordinary reality, because only men and women can do it with God. Amazing writer F. Scott Fitzgerald and his famous book "Great Gatsby" portrays such thought.
After prosperity in 1920, Fitzgerald's "Great Gatsby" and "1920s" became a decade of social decline and moral decline. The power of moral erosion can be explained by various theories. However, F. Scott Fitzgerald depicts persuasive social virtue in his novel "Great Gatsby". Fitzgerald depicts the negative impact of materialism created by the wealth-led culture of the time. - F · Scott · Fitzgerald's F · Scott · Fitzgerald's F · Scott · Fitzgerald and Henry · James's Daisy Miller, Great Gatsby, most of the characters are fantasy in most episodes. These plots are performed by characters living under these illusions These characters are overcome mainly by the ends of the story.