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Question
what is ironic about the valley of ashes? it is an industrialized zone of new york where there are great places to eat and drink. it serves as a go - between from the eggs to manhattan, forcing everyone to stop and shop there. its a beautiful area of the country that suffered a great fire. its necessary for the rich to maintain their wealth, but none of them like to acknowledge that it exists.
To determine the irony of the Valley of Ashes (from The Great Gatsby), we analyze each option:
- First option: The Valley of Ashes is a desolate, industrial wasteland, not a place with great eateries. Eliminate.
- Second option: It is a passage between West/East Egg and Manhattan, but there’s no shopping; it’s a poor, polluted area. Eliminate.
- Third option: The Valley of Ashes is not beautiful; it’s a grim, ashen industrial zone (no great fire context here). Eliminate.
- Fourth option: The Valley of Ashes is where the working class (like George Wilson) toils to support the wealthy’s lifestyles (e.g., producing goods, handling waste from their luxury). The rich benefit from it but ignore or deny its existence (they live in the Eggs/Manhattan, far from its squalor), which is ironic.
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D. It’s necessary for the rich to maintain their wealth, but none of them like to acknowledge that it exists.