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  1. Satire. Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby in the form of a satire, a criticism of society's foibles through humor.

  2. May 31, 2024 · Satire in The Great Gatsby. Satire begins right from the title of the novel. The Great Gatsby implies something ‘great,’ be it a person or a society. Therefore, the reader expects greatness from the book. However, Gatsby, the protagonist of the story, is not as great as the reader expects.

  3. Fitzgerald’s use of irony, exaggeration, and ridicule to mock hypocritical social types also qualifies The Great Gatsby as a social satire. Characters in social satires are frequently unsympathetic, functioning as emblems of social problems in order to highlight inequality and injustice.

  4. May 29, 2024 · A Satire On The American Dream: Reviewing F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘The Great Gatsby’. By Jennis Jacob / May 29, 2024. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘The Great Gatsby’ is a 1925 American novel finding its setting in the roaring twenties of America- the Jazz Age. It is a remarkable attempt by Fitzgerald to mock the idealistic idea of the ...

  5. Mar 30, 2021 · The Great Gatsby is the quintessential Jazz Age novel, capturing a mood and a moment in American history in the 1920s, after the end of the First World War. Rather surprisingly, The Great Gatsby sold no more than 25,000 copies in F. Scott Fitzgerald’s lifetime. It has now sold over 25 million copies.

  6. F. Scott Fitzgerald achieved fame in his own lifetime, in no small part due to the success of his novel "The Great Gatsby." Although the story is fictional, Fitzgerald used the novel as a...

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  8. 'The Great Gatsby' is a classic example of satire, since Fitzgerald uses humor, irony, and exaggeration to critique society. See this demonstrated through the inclusion of the privileged...

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