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F. Scott Fitzgerald

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F. Scott Fitzgerald s The Great Gatsby – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: F. Scott Fitzgerald


1
F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby

2
About the Author
  • Born-September 24, 1896
  • Died-December 21, 1940
  • Married Zelda Sayre
  • Famous works include The Great Gatsby
  • The Beautiful and the Damned
  • Tender is the Night

3
F. Scott Fitzgeralds Impact on Society
  • Fitzgerald named the 1920s The Jazz Age
  • Wrote screenplays for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
  • Created the The Great Gatsby which is said to be
    the most accurate description of the 1920s

4
Historical Information
  • Understanding the times helps to understand the
    novel

5
World War I
  • World War I ended in 1918.
  • Disillusioned because of the war, the generation
    that fought and survived has come to be called
    the lost generation.

6
The Roaring Twenties
  • America seemed to throw itself headlong into a
    decade of madcap behavior and materialism, a
    decade that has come to be called the Roaring
    Twenties.

7
The Jazz Age
  • The era is also known as the Jazz Age, when the
    music called jazz, promoted by such recent
    inventions as the phonograph and the radio, swept
    up from New Orleans to capture the national
    imagination.
  • Improvised and wild, jazz broke the rules of
    music, just as the Jazz Age thumbed its nose at
    the rules of the past.

8
The New Woman
  • Among the rules broken were the age-old
    conventions guiding the behavior of women. The
    new woman demanded the right to vote and to work
    outside the home.
  • Symbolically, she cut her hair into a boyish
    bob and bared her calves in the short skirts of
    the fashionable twenties flapper.

9
The Flappers
  • Flappers were women who rebelled against the
    fashion and social norms of the early 1900s.
  • They married at a later age and drank and smoked
    inpublic
  • Flappers were known for their carefree lifestyles.

10
Flapper Fashion
  • Flappers dressed in shapeless dresses that came
    to the knee.
  • Dresses were made to look boy-like
  • Gender bending was common. Women would try to
    make themselves look more man-like.

11
Prohibition
  • Another rule often broken was the Eighteenth
    Amendment to the Constitution, or Prohibition,
    which banned the public sale of alcoholic
    beverages from 1919 until its appeal in 1933.
  • Speak-easies, nightclubs, and taverns that sold
    liquor were often raided, and gangsters made
    illegal fortunes as bootleggers, smuggling
    alcohol into America from abroad.

12
Gambling
  • Another gangland activity was illegal gambling.
  • Perhaps the worst scandal involving gambling was
    the so-called Black Sox Scandal of 1919, in which
    eight members of the Chicago White Sox were
    indicted for accepting bribes to throw baseballs
    World Series.

13
The Automobile
  • The Jazz Age was also an era of reckless spending
    and consumption, and the most conspicuous status
    symbol of the time was a flashy new automobile.
  • Advertising was becoming the major industry that
    it is today, and soon advertisers took advantage
    of new roadways by setting up huge billboards at
    their sides.
  • Both the automobile and a bizarre billboard play
    important roles in The Great Gatsby.

14
The Jazz Age Summary
  • Prohibition was in effect
  • Dances such as the Charleston were popular
  • Popular sayings included 23 Skidoo, Bees Knees
  • Economy was in a Boom

15
Characters of The Great Gatsby
  • Jay Gatsby- The self-made wealthy man who lives
    next door to Nick Carraway and loves Daisy
    Buchanan

16
Characters of The Great Gatsby
  • Nick Carraway- the narrator, Daisys cousin,
    Gatsbys neighbor

17
Characters in The Great Gatsby
  • Daisy Buchanan- married to Tom, Gatsbys love
    interest before the war, socialite

18
Characters in The Great Gatsby
  • Tom Buchanan- Daisys husband, has an affair with
    Myrtle
  • Myrtle Wilson- Toms woman in the city, married
    to George
  • George Wilson- owns the gas station
  • Jordan Baker- Daisys friend, professional golfer

19
Settings in The Great Gatsby
  • West Egg- where Nick and Gatsby live, represents
    new money
  • East Egg- where Daisy lives, the more fashionable
    area, represents old money

20
Old Money Vs. New Money
  • New Money
  • Someone who has achieved the American Dream
  • Not as respected in the 1920s
  • Old Money
  • Money from family wealth
  • Born rich
  • Not earned through work done by yourself
  • Respected above all in the 1920s

21
The American Dream
  • Gatsby is the ideal image of one who has achieved
    the American Dream.

22
Settings in The Great Gatsby
  • The City- New York City, where the characters
    escape to for work and play
  • The Valley of Ashes- between the City and West
    Egg, where Wilsons
  • gas station is located.

23
Symbols in The Great Gatsby
  • Green Light- at the end of Daisys dock and
    visible from Gatsbys mansion. Represents
    Gatsby's hopes and dreams about Daisy.

24
Symbols in The Great Gatsby
  • The Valley of Ashes- the area between West Egg
    and New York City. It is a desolate area filled
    with industrial waste. It represents the social
    and moral decay of society during the 1920s. It
    also shows the negative effects of greed.

25
Symbols in The Great Gatsby
  • The Eyes of Dr. T. J. Ekleburg- A decaying
    billboard in the Valley of Ashes with eyes
    advertising an optometrist. There are multiple
    proposed meanings, including the representation
    of Gods moral judgment on society.

26
Important Quotes
  • I hope shell be a fool- thats the best thing a
    girl can be in this world, a beautiful little
    fool.
  • Daisys description of her daughter
  • So we beat on, boats against the current, borne
    back ceaselessly into the past. the last line
    of the novel

27
Important Quotes
  • "They were careless people, Tom and Daisy- they
    smashed up things and creatures and then
    retreated back into their money or their vast
    carelessness or whatever it was that kept them
    together, and let other people clean up the mess
    they had made." Nicks description of Tom and
    Daisy
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