
- 17 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Seminar paper from the year 2003 in the subject American Studies - Literature, grade: 1 (A), Southern Connecticut State University (English Department), course: American Literature of the Early 1900s, language: English, abstract: Nick Carraway is one of the major characters of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The GreatGatsby. He is a young man from Minneapolis/ St. Paul who graduated from Yale Universityand served his country in the First World War. Carraway was raised in a small town in theMidwest. He finds his hometown to be stifling and decides to move to the East Coast in theearly 1920s to learn the bond business. He hopes to find a sense of freedom and identity inNew York. Carraway lives next door to the wealthy Jay Gatsby in a district of Long Islandcalled West Egg.However, Nick Carraway is not only a character taking part in the story, he is also theI-narrator that the author uses to recount his story. The Great Gatsby is told entirely throughNick Carraway's eyes; his thoughts and perceptions color and shape the story. The GreatGatsby actually functions as a personal memoir of Carraway's experiences with hismysterious neighbor Jay Gatsby in the summer of 1922. The story becomes more realistic bymeans of using an first-person-narrator. Because Nick Carraway is experiencing events andtelling the reader about them in his own words, the plot becomes more believable. Rather thanimposing himself between the reader and the action, a first-person- narrator can bring thereader closer to the action by forcing him to experience the events as though he was thenarrator himself. The I of the narrator becomes the I of the reader who is, like Carraway, leftwondering who Gatsby is, why he gives these huge parties and what his background and pastmay be. The reader might identify more with the story than it is the case when an omniscientthird-person narrator is used. The reader cares about Gatsby because the narrator does; hewants to find out more about Gatsby because the narrator does; he is angry that no one comesto Gatsby's funeral because the narrator is... Carraway's position as the narrator, placedbetween the reader and the narration, gives him the only authoritative role of interpretation.Therefore the narrator's point of view and his credibility should be examined.Nick Carraway seems to be the perfect choice to narrate the novel. He is the cousin ofDaisy Buchanan, he was in the same senior society as Tom Buchanan at Yale, and he rented ahouse right next to Jay Gatsby. He knows all the characters well enough to be present at thecrucial scenes in the novel. [...]
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