manners and ethics, but he also romanticizes and admires Gatsby, describing the events of the novel in a nostalgic and elegiac tone.Tense - PastSetting (time) - Summer 1922Settings (place) - Long Island and New York CityProtagonist - Gatsby and/or NickMajor conflict - Gatsby has amassed a vast fortune in order to win the affections of the upper- class Daisy Buchanan, but his mysterious past stands in the way of his being accepted by her.Rising action - Gatsby's lavish parties, Gatsby's arrangement of a meeting with Daisy at Nick'sClimax - There are two possible climaxes: Gatsby's reunion with Daisy in Chapters V–VI; the confrontation between Gatsby and Tom in the Plaza Hotel in Chapter VII.Falling action - Daisy's rejection of Gatsby, Myrtle's death, Gatsby's murderThemes - The decline of the American dream, the spirit of the 1920s, the difference between social classes, the role of symbols in the human conception of meaning, the role of the past in dreams of the futureMotifs - The connection between events and weather, the connection between geographical location and social values, images of time, extravagant parties, the quest for wealthSymbols - The green light on Daisy's dock, the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg, the valley of ashes, Gatsby's parties, East Egg, West EggForeshadowing - The car wreck after Gatsby's party in Chapter III, Owl Eyes's comments about the theatricality of Gatsby's life, the mysterious telephone calls Gatsby receives from Chicago and Philadelphia...