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The Great Gatsby PreReading Guide

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Title: The Great Gatsby PreReading Guide


1
The Great Gatsby Pre-Reading Guide
  • F. Scott Fitzgeralds tale of a mans pursuit of
    the American Dream

2
The AuthorFrancis Scott Key Fitzgerald
  • Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on September 24,
    1896 a second cousin to the author of the Star
    Spangled Banner
  • His names a sign of his fathers pride in his
    familys past
  • Lived in upstate NY until 1908, when they
    returned to St. Paul
  • A member of Princetons class of 1917, he
    neglected school for writing. He dropped out of
    school and joined the army, quickly writing a
    novel, The Romantic Egoist, because he was
    certain he would die in war
  • In 1918 he fell in love with Zelda Sayre, who
    broke off their engagement because he did not
    have enough money
  • This Side of Paradise (1920), made Fitzgerald
    famous overnight Zelda marries him
  • Moves to France in 1924, writes The Great Gatsby
    befriends Ernest Hemingway Gatsby receives
    critical praise, but does not sell well
  • 1929, he and Zelda return to US continues to
    write and tries Hollywood screenplays Zelda in
    and out of sanatoriums
  • Dies in 1940, convinced he was a failure

3
Fitzgeralds Writing
  • He was a painstaking reviser whose fiction went
    through layers of drafts he worked to create the
    patterns and symmetry that appear in The Great
    Gatsby
  • The Great Gatsby is regarded as the second
    greatest English language novel of the 20th
    century
  • Major themes aspiration, the idealism that
    creates the America character, and mutability or
    loss
  • In his story "The Snows of Kilimanjaro" (Esquire,
    August 1936) Hemingway comments that "poor Scott
    Fitzgerald" was "wrecked" by his "romantic awe"
    of the rich.

4
What is Modernism?
  • Modernism is a term used to describe literary,
    dramatic, art, and philosophical movements
  • Some types of modernism include expressionism,
    cubism, surrealism, and dadaism
  • The Great Gatsby is a work of modernist fiction

5
Features of Modernist Fiction
  • A focus on alienated individuals, rather than
    heroes who stand for the ideals of society
  • Frequent themes of impermanence and change
  • The use of understatement and irony to reveal
    important emotions and ideas
  • The use of symbols and images that suggest
    meanings, rather than statements that explain
    meanings

6
Whats it about?
  • A novel about the aspirations of one man, and his
    quest to obtain the American Dream
  • The novel is an exploration of our national myth
  • The novel follows Jay Gatsby as he pursues his
    dream
  • Focus on parties, carelessness, the American
    Romance with cars, , mobility
  • The novel also chronicles the process of change
    that the narrator, Nick Carraway goes through
  • It captures the beauty and tragedy of the 1920s,
    an age of excess

7
The Roaring 20s
  • Fitzgerald coins the term Jazz age to describe
    the decade
  • 1918 WWI Armistice
  • 1919 Prohibition Amendment rich can still
    obtain alcohol promoted gangsters, who
    controlled speakeasies and distribution systems
  • 1920 Ratification of Womens Suffrage Amendment
  • Minimal interference by the Govt. in business
  • Industrial output doubles
  • Americans are hungry for material goods
  • 87 of country lives on lt2,500
  • 5 receives 1/3 of countrys income
  • Public enthralled by the wealthy, who they view
    as pleasure seekers living sinful lives
  • 1929 Jazz Age ends with Stock Market Crash

8
Our National Myth
  • Prosperity anyone can make it
  • Freedom and equality we all have the same chance
  • Status comes from , not the class of your birth

9
The Setting
  • East and West Egg north shore of Long Island
    they are the playgrounds of the superrich
  • Valley of Ashes (the Wilsons) a wasteland, the
    dumping ground for NYC and E. and W. Egg
  • West Egg new (Gatsby and Nick)
  • East Egg old , inherited, (Buchanans)
  • NYC a nexus for the characters
  • Mid-West home for Nick, Gatsby, et al

10
Narrative Structure
  • The novel uses the scenic method to string
    together two narratives and three time periods
  • 3 time periods
  • Past 1915-spring 1922
  • Present-Past Spring-Fall 1922
  • Present Fall 1923 Nick begins to write his
    story
  • Point of View modified 1st person Nick appears
    to be non-judgmental so the characters can reveal
    themselves
  • Nick 3 roles observer (inexperienced and
    vulnerable) participant interpreter and
    journalist
  • His roles represent his maturation and
    self-discovery
  • Initiation to dishonesty, infidelity,
    corruption, carelessness, and materialism
  • 3 main parties serve as checkpoints in the
    narrative each represents a critical point in
    the narrative the third is the climax

11
Jay Gatsby The Protagonist
  • A mythic character who embodies the American
    Dream
  • Focuses of his dream is the alluring Daisy
    Buchanan, a married woman who comes from old
    money
  • Rags to riches Farming to business rural to
    urban
  • Was once Jay Gatz reinvents himself
  • The quintessential dreamer his devotion to a
    dream gives his life substance
  • Extremely wealthy, mysterious, throws lavish
    parties

12
Themes
  • Wealth/materialism
  • The American Dream
  • Reality vs. Illusion
  • Time/Desire to repeat the past
  • Fidelity and friendship
  • Society/the spirit as wasteland

13
Key Symbols
  • Dr. TJ Eckleburgs Eyes the sign failure to see
  • Colors yellow, green, white, pink
  • The Valley of Ashes physical, spiritual,
    societal desolation
  • West and East Egg travel from west to east
    typifies American migration from farm to city
  • The Green Lightthe dream but what about the
    dream?
  • Gatsbys car

14
Questions to Consider
  • What literary techniques does Fitzgerald use to
    convey his ideas? Why does he use them?
  • Why is Fitzgeralds style distinct from
    Hemingways?
  • What is the American Dream, and how does it shape
    our lives?
  • Explain Nick Carraways role as a narrator.
  • What makes The Great Gatsby a work of literature
    belonging to the modernist movement?
  • Who is Jay Gatsby? Why does Nick say, he
    represents everything for which I have an
    unaffected scorn? What is his romantic
    capacity for hope?
  • In what ways is the novel a work of art?
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