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Text from sant-spain - English

  • Correct me, please!

  • Nick generally dodges Gatsby’s controversial sides and focuses on what he considers his greatness, this blind romantic trust in the power of his freewill, which eventually drives him to his downfall.
    • “The Great Gatsby is a tragedy of the will.” Gatsby’s blind search of an idyllic past clash with the reality of its impossibility; he takes .
    • In a corrupted unequal individualistic society, the American Dream loses its meaning: Gatsby (like America) started, as we see in his childhood schedule, with the honorable intention of achieving virtue through hard work and self-improvement.
    • However, with the past of time he ends up being a huge fraud, getting involve in criminal activities and following unworthy childish dreams; Gatsby’s life symbolizes the decay of the American dream.
    • Nick finds Gatsby’s greatness in his perseverance which is rare in those days; however, if we put aside Nick’s romanticization of him we see that his ambition is quite destructive: Gatsby is not great, he just have the characteristic charm of a dreamer.
  • At the end of the book(in this decadency), Fitzgerald suggests that in the same way Gatsby longs for his precious past, the decayed modern America tries uselessly to go back to its majestic beginning, a time where “the new world” seemed able to make all our dreams true.

PLEASE, HELP TO CORRECT EACH SENTENCE! - English

  • Otsikko
  • Lause 1
    • Nick generally dodges Gatsby’s controversial sides and focuses on what he considers his greatness, this blind romantic trust in the power of his freewill, which eventually drives him to his downfall.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 1ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 1
  • Lause 2
    • “The Great Gatsby is a tragedy of the will.” Gatsby’s blind search of an idyllic past clash with the reality of its impossibility; he takes .
      Äänestä nyt!
    • “The Great Gatsby is a tragedy of the will.” Gatsby’s blind search of an idyllic past clashes with the reality of its impossibility; he takes .
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 2ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 2
  • Lause 3
    • In a corrupted unequal individualistic society, the American Dream loses its meaning: Gatsby (like America) started, as we see in his childhood schedule, with the honorable intention of achieving virtue through hard work and self-improvement.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • In a corrupted, unequal and individualistic society, the American Dream loses its meaning:. Gatsby (like America) started, as we see in his childhood schedule, with the honorable intention of achieving virtue through hard work and self-improvement.
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 3ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 3
  • Lause 4
    • However, with the past of time he ends up being a huge fraud, getting involve in criminal activities and following unworthy childish dreams; Gatsby’s life symbolizes the decay of the American dream.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • However, with the pastsing of time, he ends up being a huge fraud, getting involved in criminal activities and following unworthy childish dreams; Gatsby’s life symbolizes the decay of the American dream.
    • However, with the pastsing of time he ends up being a huge fraud, getting involved in criminal activities and following unworthy childish dreams;. Gatsby’s life symbolizes the decay of the American dream.
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 4ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 4
  • Lause 5
    • Nick finds Gatsby’s greatness in his perseverance which is rare in those days; however, if we put aside Nick’s romanticization of him we see that his ambition is quite destructive: Gatsby is not great, he just have the characteristic charm of a dreamer.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • Nick finds Gatsby’s greatness in his perseverance which iwas rare in those days; h. However, if we put aside Nick’s romanticization of him , we see that his ambition is quite destructive:. Gatsby is not great, he just haves the characteristic charms of a dreamer.
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 5ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 5
  • Lause 6
    • At the end of the book(in this decadency), Fitzgerald suggests that in the same way Gatsby longs for his precious past, the decayed modern America tries uselessly to go back to its majestic beginning, a time where “the new world” seemed able to make all our dreams true.
      Äänestä nyt!
    • ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 6ADD a NEW CORRECTION! - Lause 6