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Question
fitzgerald and the roaring twenties
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read the excerpt from the great gatsby.
i lived at west egg, the—well, the less fashionable of the two, though this is a most superficial tag to express
the bizarre and not a little sinister contrast between them.
the phrase, \i lived at west egg, the—well, the less fashionable of the two\ reveals
the narrator’s upper-middle-class, socioeconomic standing.
the narrator’s awareness of social judgments and their central role in the novel.
the narrator’s deep desire to fit in and be friends with the fashionable crowd.
the narrator’s insecurities as he befriends a new group of individuals.
To solve this, we analyze each option:
- Option 1: The phrase focuses on the "fashionability" of West Egg, not directly on socioeconomic class. Eliminate.
- Option 2: The narrator acknowledges West Egg as "less fashionable" and notes the "sinister contrast" between the two Eggs. This shows he is aware of social judgments (about fashionability/status) and these judgments are central (as the novel explores class/social divides). This fits.
- Option 3: The phrase is a statement of fact about West Egg's status, not about a desire to fit in. Eliminate.
- Option 4: The phrase does not relate to insecurities about befriending others. Eliminate.
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B. the narrator’s awareness of social judgments and their central role in the novel.