Answer:
1. Gatsby certainly did love Daisy, and all she represented to him - -success, power, and glamor. She was the unattainable, his Dream. However, Gatsby creates this love for Daisy, just as he creates a fantasy life. She is integral to his dream for success.
number 2 is asking to apply YOUR own life. this one I can't answer.
3. t's about the costs of fantasy—inevitable costs, since our dreams and fantasies are part of who we are. ... (Gatsby, Nick concludes, made the mistake of “living too long with a single dream”; this makes him admirable, but also unwise, even delusional.) A kind of fatigue sets in.
4. However, I inferred you are referring to the article written by Joshua Rothman in the Newyorker entitled "The Serious Superficiality of The Great Gatsby".
5. 1) The American dream 2) Gatsby's love for Daisy
Explanation:
I would highly suggest you look at cliff notes or spark notes. I read this back in high school and The 2 sites were very helpful with answering questions like this! hope this helps.
Answer: Third person omniscient point of view
Explanation: The excerpt focuses on just Timothy, so that will be a third person limited point of view.
A. Jamal's account of his own experience would most likely be in first person point of view.
Answer:
It means to be free and to let others also be free by respecting the differences in many aspects that we have.
Explanation:
What Mandela means, is that we can not be free if we do not let the other be free too, that is to say, that we have to respect each other above our differences and try to enhance our collective freedom to live a better life.
This is what Mandela did when he became president of South Africa by not punishing the ones that made him and his community suffer, instead he tried to free all the inhabitants of South Africa and taught them to respect each other and their differences to live a happier life without resentfulness.