Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200...

63
THE GREAT JEOPARDY GAME

description

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS How does the narrator describe Gatsby? Answer

Transcript of Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200...

Page 1: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

THE GREAT JEOPARDY GAME

Page 2: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

Character Descriptio

nsRelationshi

psQuotes & Symbols Plot Points Inferences

PastPresentFuture

200 200 200 200 200 200

400 400 400 400 400 400

600 600 600 600 600 600

800 800 800 800 800 800

1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000

Page 3: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 200

• How does the narrator describe Gatsby?

Answer

Page 4: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 400

• Describe Tom. What is our impression of him in chapter 1?

Answer

Page 5: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 600

• What kind of person is Daisy?

Answer

Page 6: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 800

• How is Gatsby introduced into the novel?

Answer

Page 7: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 1000

• Identify Myrtle and George Wilson.

Answer

Page 8: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 200

• How does Nick know Tom and Daisy?

Answer

Page 9: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 400

• How does Nick meet Gatsby for the first time?

Answer

Page 10: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 600

• What does Nick say about people like Daisy and Tom?

Answer

Page 11: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 800

• What “matter” did Gatsby have Jordan discuss with Nick in the beginning of the book?

Answer

Page 12: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 1000

• What does Jordan tell Nick about Daisy, Gatsby, and Tom?

Answer

Page 13: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 200

• When asked about her daughter, what does Daisy say?

Answer

Page 14: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 400

• What is the “Valley of Ashes”?

Answer

Page 15: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 600

• What are the “eyes of Dr. T.J. Eckleburg”?

Answer

Page 16: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 800

• What does the green light on the dock mean to Gatsby?

Answer

Page 17: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 1000

• Explain this quote: “The vitality of his illusion had gone beyond Daisy—beyond everything.”

Answer

Page 18: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 200

• What happens on the way home from New York towards the end of the novel?

Answer

Page 19: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 400

• Where did they go in Chapter 2? (What was at 158th Street?)

Answer

Page 20: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 600

• What did Tom do to Myrtle when she mentioned Daisy’s name?

Answer

Page 21: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 800

• What is Tom’s reaction to Myrtle’s death.

Answer

Page 22: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 1000

• Describe the meeting between Daisy and Gatsby.

Answer

Page 23: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 200

• What kind of people come to Gatsby’s parties?

Answer

Page 24: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 400

• Why did Nick Carraway go to the party for the first time?

Answer

Page 25: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 600

• What was Gatsby’s reaction to seeing Daisy’s child?

Answer

Page 26: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 800

• After Tom confronts Gatsby about the relationship between him and Daisy, how does Daisy react to

both men?

Answer

Page 27: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 1000

• Why is the book that Gatsby’s father shows Nick important to the novel? What does it say about

Gatsby’s character?

Answer

Page 28: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 200

• From where did the narrator come from, and why?

Answer

Page 29: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 400

• What is Gatsby’s real name and where is he from?

Answer

Page 30: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 600

• What did Dan Cody do for Gatsby?

Answer

Page 31: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 800

• What does Gatsby tell Nick about his past with Daisy, and how he planned to impress her?

Answer

Page 32: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 1000

• Describe how Gatsby made and shows off his money

Answer

Page 33: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 200

• Gatsby had an extraordinary gift for hope, and a romantic readiness.

Game Board

Page 34: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 400

• He has an athletic build and an arrogant attitude. He is an old-money snob.

Game Board

Page 35: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 600

• Daisy is flighty and very superficial

Game Board

Page 36: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 800

• He is mentioned in conversation between Nick and Jordan. Later, Nick sees him on the lawn in

the moonlight.

Game Board

Page 37: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

CHARACTER DESCRIPTIONS - 1000

• Myrtle is Tom’s mistress, and George is her husband.

Game Board

Page 38: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 200

• Daisy and Nick are cousins; Nick and Tom knew each other from school.

Game Board

Page 39: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 400

• While Nick is at one of Gatsby’s parties, he asks a man he’s talking to where Gatsby is, only to

discover that he’s talking to him!

Game Board

Page 40: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 600

• They were careless people who smashed things and creatures and let others clean up the mess.

Game Board

Page 41: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 800

• Gatsby wanted Nick to arrange a luncheon meeting between himself and Daisy.

Game Board

Page 42: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

RELATIONSHIPS - 1000

• Daisy and Gatsby had had an earlier romance. Her parents wouldn’t let her see him off to war.

She then married Tom and soon found out that he had a mistress.

Game Board

Page 43: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 200

• “I suppose she talks—and eats and everything.”

Game Board

Page 44: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 400

• An industrial zone.

Game Board

Page 45: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 600

• An illustration on a billboard.

Game Board

Page 46: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 800

• It stood for his vision and his future with Daisy.

Game Board

Page 47: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

QUOTES AND SYMBOLS - 1000

• He had--through his years of dreaming--made her larger-than-life.

Game Board

Page 48: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 200

• Daisy is driving Gatsby’s car. She hits Myrtle, but keeps driving.

Game Board

Page 49: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 400

• The apartment where Tom met his mistress.

Game Board

Page 50: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 600

• He hit her and broke her nose!

Game Board

Page 51: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 800

• Tom’s first instinct is to protect himself. Later, he cries.

Game Board

Page 52: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PLOT POINTS - 1000

• It was initially very awkward. Gatsby was nervous, but they became more at easy as they

talked.

Game Board

Page 53: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 200

• The newly rich & famous, and their friends.

Game Board

Page 54: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 400

• Gatsby sent his chauffer over, and invited him directly.

Game Board

Page 55: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 600

• He looks at her with surprise.

Game Board

Page 56: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 800

• She wants the escape provided by Gatsby, but needs Tom because he is a lot like her.

Game Board

Page 57: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

INFERENCES - 1000

• It shows Gatsby’s romantic spirit and his desire to get ahead.

Game Board

Page 58: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE – 200

• From the Midwest to study the bond business.

Game Board

Page 59: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 400

• James Gatz and he’s from North Dakota.

Game Board

Page 60: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 600

• He educated Gatsby about money and the people who have it.

Game Board

Page 61: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 800

• He fell in love with her and lied about his financial status to impress her.

Game Board

Page 62: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

PAST PRESENT FUTURE - 1000

• He took advantage of the Post WWI period, and he used the money to throw wild parties and buy

flashy and extravagant things.

Game Board

Page 63: Character Descriptions Relationships Quotes  Symbols Plot PointsInferences Past Present Future 200 400 600 800 1000.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Game Board

Doctor_t__j__eckleburg. Photograph. World’s Fairs – Back To The Future. By Sukimd2. Wordpress. Web. <http://sandacom.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/doctor_t__j__eckleburg_by_sukimd2.jpg?w=600&h=481>.

Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York: Scribner, 1925. Print.

Fitzgerald. Photograph. Princeton University Library. F. Scott Fitzgerald. The New York Times. Web. <http://topics.nytimes.com/topics/reference/timestopics/people/f/f_scott_fitzgerald/index.html>.

Shulock, Anne. The Great Gatsby. Photograph. Does The Great Gatsby Live On Empire Avenue? Spin Sucks. Web. <http://spinsucks.com/social-media/does-the-great-gatsby-live-on-empire-avenue/>.

www.dictionary.com