Wednesday, November 13, 2019
gatcolor Color Symbols and Symbolism in The Great Gatsby :: Great Gatsby Essays
      Color Symbolism in The Great Gatsby                Colors can symbolize many different things.   Artists use colors in their     paintings when they  want you to see what they are trying to  express.  Like if     an artist is trying to express sorrow or death he often uses blacks blues,  and     grays basically he uses dreary colors.  You automatically feel what the  artist     is trying to express.  When the artist uses bright colors you feel warm  and you     feel happiness.  In the novel The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald is  like an     artist.  He uses colors to symbolize the many different intangible ideas  in the     book.  He uses the color yellow to symbolize moral decay decadence and  death.     Then he uses the color white to symbolize innocence.  He also uses the  color     green to express hope.  Fitzgerald's use of the color green the  strongest.     Although these are not the only colors that Fitzgerald uses for symbolism,  they     are the ones that he expresses the most.  This book is a very colorful  book in     the sense that it uses colors to cover so many different aspects of  peoples     lives.                 Fitzgerald uses the color yellow to symbolize  moral decay.  On (Page 18)     he writes " The lamp-light, bright on his boots and dull on the  autumn-leaf     yellow of her hair."  He is talking about Tom and Jordan Baker, and he  is     suggesting that tom might be heading for moral decay.  In the book there  are     several things that Tom does that might prove this.  First of all Tom is  having     an affair with Myrtle Wilson.  A second thing is that he does not like  Gatsby,     and several times he tries to prove that he is not who he says he is.   Tom even     hires a detective to prove this.  Gatsby had  a Rolls Royce that  was yellow "His     station wagon scampered like a yellow brisk-bug . . ."  (Page 39).   Gatsby's car     was referred to many times in the book, but it was always referred to as  "The     yellow car" (Page 157).                 The color yellow was used most frequently when  there was a death.  One     of the first things that Fitzgerald wrote about when Myrtle died was when  they     laid her on a table in the garage.  					    
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