For the masterpiece of "Scott Fitzgerald" "Great Gatsby", "two strange landforming zones" are "same profiles" not too far from lively New York City, but obviously all other aspects are different (4) We will provide the main scene. . West Egg is a new wealthy center full of low-level living and criminals. Opposite the bay there is a more "fashionable" house, scandalous and not worried, living luxurious luxurious rich and wealthy elite living (5).
To distinguish between the East and the West, Fitzgerald is the best way to explain the difference in wealth. Tom and Daisy shouted at the eggs in the east, but Gatsby had to see the water from the eggs of the western part of his family. Just because they get their money they are not richer than Gatsby, and what they know is those who will enable them to live on Eastern eggs. I believe that Fitzgerald used it as a metaphor for talking about the American society of the 1920s.
Fitzgerald's novels occurred in New York, West Egg's East Egg, Long Island Sound. East Egg lives old families who earn money for generations. Western eggs are for US nova, a group of people with new money. The physical separation of East Egg and West Egg helps highlight the social separation between "old" coins and "new" coins in the early 20th century. In the novel, the theme is that the author is trying to tell the reader. Fitzgerald has several themes in "The Great Gatsby". One theme is greed. You need to get more characters, more stuff, more stuff, more power. Another theme is America's dream. Gatsby uses his boots to raise himself from poverty, with the theme of extreme wealth, status and class conflict.