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Could you compare and contrast the ways that the authors handle one issue in both of the novels? How they use certain literary devices to portray these issues? Posted by puck18 on Jul 29, 2008. |
The Bluest Eye Group
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The two novels you mention could not be more different in terms of style, characters, time period, setting, and cultural background. However, there is one "issue" that both novels explore--the unachievable dream. For Gatsby, his dream is to win back Daisy after she broke his heart many years before. For Pecola Breedlove in The Bluest Eye, her unachievable dream is to have blue eyes and all the social advantages that come with being a white, well-cared-for, blue-eyed girl. Both dreams end in tragedy: Gatsby is murdered as a result of Daisy's carelessness, and Pecola loses her mind after she is sexually abused by her father. Posted by podunc on Jul 30, 2008. |
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The primary similarity between the two stories is that both feature main characters who aspire to live amongst a social class of people that they feel removed from. In The Great Gatsby, the main character is kept from joining in high-class society at first because he is born into a poor family; Gatsby later becomes a self-made millionaire and returns to court Daisy the rich girl who rejected him as a suitor when we was younger. In The Bluest Eye, the main character is kept from the social group she wishes to join primarily because of her race; an African-American girl, she aspires to look like the blond haired, blue-eyed white girls in her community. Posted by appletrees on Aug 22, 2008. |

