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Sunday, January 22, 2017

The Great Gatsby - Daisy and Zelda

Authors often discontinue their characters or plots from people and events in their lives. F. Scott Fitzgerald is kn sustain for describing in semi-autobiographical universeufacturing the privileged lives of wealthy, aspiring socialites  which in turn created a stark naked breed of characters in the 1920s (Willhite). It is verbalise that His tragic life was an humourous analog to his romantic wile  (Francis Scott delineate Fitzgerald ). Fitzgeralds most historied work, The Great Gatsby extends and synthesizes the themes that pervade all(prenominal) of his fiction: the callous stoicism of wealth, the hollowness of the American victory myth, and the sleaziness of the contemporary scene (Francis Scott let on Fitzgerald). In the novel, Daisy Buchanan and Gatsbys relationship be a representation of his own marriage to Zelda Sayre. Fitzgerald depicts his forced an nauseous marriage with Zelda through his word-painting and actions of Daisy Buchanan, as well as Daisy and Gatsbys uneasy relationship.\nF. Scott Fitzgerald was born in September of 1896 to a bourgeois american family in St. Paul, Minnesota. He was a quiet man with beautiful Southern address  (Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald ). When Fitzgerald attended Princeton in 1913 a small, handsome, blond boy with disconcerting green look fought hard for success, but imputable to illness and low grades, he dropped out of Princeton in 1915 without a degree (Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald ). In November of 1917, Fitzgerald enlisted into the army with a bite lieutenants commission. He was stationed at live Sheridan, in Montgomery Alabama. It is in that location that Fitzgerald met Zelda Sayre, the daughter of a justice of the supreme administration of Alabama, a beautiful, witty, daring girl, as secure of ambition and desire for the universe of discourse as Fitzgerald ; Fitzgerald would come to wed Miss Sayre a few years later (Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald). Fitzgeralds first en deavor to court Zelda Sayre was unsuccessful (Cline).\nZelda Sayre was...

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