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Published byAudra Wheeler Modified over 7 years ago
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Evaluating the narrative voice present in The Great Gatsby.
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First person narration
Unreliable narrator First person narration Narrative ellipses Analepsis Prolepsis
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Analepsis and Prolepsis: These are ways in which a narrative's discourse re-orders a given story: by "flashing back" to an earlier point in the story (analepsis) or "flashing forward" to a moment later in thenchronological sequence of events (prolepsis).
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Implied author Embedded narrative Perspective Flat character Framing narrative
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Semantic field Bildungsroman Hyperbole Pathos Protagonist Antagonist
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How is the narrative structured?
Write down a summary of events of Chapter 3 of The Great Gatsby. Note down key quotations – what are the most important events? How is the narrative structured?
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The Great Gatsby . F Scott Fitzgerald (a) Write about the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in Chapter 4. (b) What do you think about the view that there are no women in The Great Gatsby with whom the reader can sympathise?
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What makes a good answer?
The following points should be explored: Narrative voice and how it impacts on the reader’s view of the text Setting – where relevant Form – ballad, chapter headings or lack of, chronology, genre Choice of language – this could be included with narrative voice above, and/or dealt with discretely
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(a) Write about the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in Chapter 2.
Narrative perspective Setting Chronology of the chapter Descriptive detail
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The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
Write about some of the ways Fitzgerald tells the story in Chapter 2. Authorial methods need to be related to the story being told in this chapter. Possible content: • narrative perspective/voices: first person narrator, self-conscious story teller and author, significance of Nick’s reconstruction of drunkenness, use of voices of Tom, Wilson, Myrtle, the McKees, Catherine, etc. • setting: Valley of the Ashes, New York, Tom’s apartment, Pennsylvania Station/ early 20th century, one afternoon and evening, etc. • 20th century tragedy, a novel about writing a novel, a love story, etc. • linear chronology in this chapter but with a sense that the story is being told retrospectively begins with the description of the Valley of the Ashes, moves to the train journey to New York and the party at Tom’s apartment, ends with Nick on the station, etc. • poetic prose, descriptive detail, sensual description, use of dramatic dialogue, descriptive writing, surreal description of drunkenness, references to newspapers and other texts, colloquial language, time references, use of names, language of altercation, use of ellipsis, etc.
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