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The Jazz Age

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation - The Jazz Age Author: Ed Tech Last modified by: gmcintyre Created Date: 10/26/2004 11:17:37 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Jazz Age


1
The Jazz Age

Finding meaning in an era of frivolity
2
The Look
  • Women
  • Short permed hair
  • Swingy, flowy skirts dresses
  • Flashy, gaudy jewelry
  • Men
  • Sleek hair
  • Smart, stylish tuxedoes

3
Fashions of 1920-1930
4
Influences
After World War I, people felt free-spirited so
they stopped obeying rules. As a result, fashions
became less formal. King Tuts discovery also
influenced the fashion. It inspired ladies
clothing, jewelry, shoes, perfume and cosmetics.
5
Silhouettes
Women disregarded the corsets so they could have
boyish figures.
6
Trends
WOMEN Shorter skirts Low waistlines Sleeveless
dresses Mid-calf lengths Scoop, U-neck and square
necklines. Frilly lace Boyish figures Short,
bobbed hair White face powder
MEN Creased and cuffed pants Belts (Instead of
suspenders) Shallow, flat topped, brimmed hats
7
Popular Colors
Yellows, golds, tans, pale pinks, sky blue,
powder blue, indigo, stark whites, Chinese reds,
burgundies and green.
8
Movies
The Jazz Singer The Street of Forgotten Men The
American Venus A Social Celebrity Its the Old
Army Game The Show-off Just Another Blonde Love
em and Leave em Evening Clothes
Rolled Stockings Now Were in the Air The City
Gone Wild A Girl in Every Port Beggars of
Life The Canary Murder Case Pandora's Box Diary
of a Lost Girl Prix de Beaute
9
Historical Moments
Women got the right to vote Alcohol became
illegal WWI ended The Jazz Singer (first movie
with sound) was released.
10
Entertainment
  • Learning to dance to the beat of a different
    drummer
  • Speakeasies and Saloons
  • Driving in style

11
1919 World Series
  • Eddie Ciccote, Shoeless Joe Jackson, Chick
    Gandil, et al
  • Sharp shift in betting odds
  • White Sox became underdogs against Reds

Throwing the game away
1921 confessions branded these men forever as the
Black Sox
12
  • Fitzgerald was born in 1896 in Saint Paul,
    Minnesota, and educated at Princeton, although he
    dropped out to join the army before he completed
    his degree. Stationed near Montgomery, Alabama,
    he met and later married Zelda Sayre, a
    high-strung woman from a family more prominent
    than his own. His first novel, This Side of
    Paradise, published in 1920, was a tremendous
    critical and commercial success. Fitzgerald
    followed with The Beautiful and the Damned in
    1922, The Great Gatsby in 1925, Tender is the
    Night (1934), and was working on The Last Tycoon
    (1941) when he died in Hollywood in 1940.

13
  • Nick Carraway
  • Nick Carraway is the narrator of this story. As
    you can see on the first page Nick holds himself
    in higher esteem than the other characters in the
    novel. Even though Nick is the narrator he should
    not be completely trusted. On the first page he
    boasts about how he doesn't judge people yet
    throughout the story he's judging people. The
    only person whom he envies is Gatsby. On page 2
    Nick says about Gatsby, He has an extraordinary
    gift for hope, a romantic readiness such as I
    have never found in any other person and which it
    is not likely I shall ever find again.
  • Themes of the Novel
  • This novel is filled with multiple themes but the
    predominate one focuses on the death of the
    American Dream. This can be explained by how
    Gatsby came to get his fortune. Through his
    dealings with organized crime he didn't adhere to
    the American Dream guidelines. Nick also suggests
    this with the manner in which he talks about all
    the rich characters in the story. The immoral
    people have all the money. Of course looking over
    all this like the eyes of God are those of Dr.
    T.J. Eckleburg on the billboard.
  • The second theme that needs to be acknowledged is
    the thought of repeating the past. Gatsby's whole
    being since going off to war is devoted to
    getting back together with Daisy and have things
    be the way they were before he left. That's why
    Gatsby got a house like the one Daisy used to
    live in right across the bay from where she
    lives. He expresses this desire by reaching
    towards the green light on her porch early in the
    book. The last paragraph, So we beat on, boats
    against the current, born back ceaselessly into
    the past reinforces this theme.
  • Fitzgerald was in his twenty's when he wrote this
    novel and since he went to Princeton he was
    considered a spokesman for his generation. He
    wrote about the third theme which is the
    immorality that was besieging the 1920's.
    Organized crime ran rampant, people were partying
    all the time, and affairs were common play. The
    last of which Fitzgerald portrays well in this
    novel.
  • The eyes of T. J. Eckleburg convey a fourth theme
    in this novel. George Wilson compares them to the
    eyes of God looking over the valley of Ashes. The
    unmoving eyes on the billboard look down on the
    Valley of Ashes and see all the immorality and
    garbage of the times. By the end of the novel you
    will realize that this symbolizes that God is
    dead.
  • Links to related Gatsby and Fitzgerald pages

14
Also, for someone with such high moral values he
doesn't handle commitment very well. That's
probably a main reason why he left the Mid West
and it's part of why he ended up going back. Nick
left the Mid West to be a stock broker in New
York but didn't get rich, yet everywhere he looks
these amoral people are rolling in the wealth.
15
  • Jay Gatsby
  • Gatsby is the rich, majestic, protagonist of the
    novel. While it isn't clear how he made all his
    money it is obvious that it was through illegal
    dealings in organized crime. There was a
    reference to the 1919 World Series (That's the
    one where the players on the Chicago White Sox
    helped out organized crime by not trying their
    hardest when it counted). It is also clear that
    the driving motivation for getting all this cash
    is so that it will appeal to Daisy. Daisy was the
    rich girl that he fell in love with before he
    joined the service.

16
Unfortunately, he just didn't have enough money
to keep her while he was overseas. When Gatsby
got back, she was married to someone else but
that didn't dissuade him in the least. Gatsby's
whole efforts in this book are focused on trying
to bring him and Daisy back to the point of time
before he joined the army, except this time he
has enough money for her. Gatsby says it himself
on page 111, Can't repeat the past? Why of
course you can!
17
  • Daisy Buchanan
  • Daisy is the woman Gatsby is trying to win back
    and coincidentally she is also Nick's second
    cousin. Daisy doesn't have a strong will and she
    cracks under pressure as will be shown late in
    the book in the hotel scene. She is the original
    material girl and focuses on the outward instead
    of the inward. Tom bought her love with a three
    hundred thousand dollar necklace, and now Gatsby
    is trying to do it with a huge mansion and a lot
    of nice shirts.(You'll understand the shirts
    reference when you read the part about when Daisy
    first visits Gatsby's house).

18
  • Tom Buchanan
  • Tom is the antagonist in this novel. While Gatsby
    was fighting in World War I Tom was using his
    wealth to sweep Daisy off her feet. Tom is a
    yuppy and clearly in the way of Gatsby's love for
    Daisy. He is having an affair, which he makes no
    attempt to keep secret, with Myrtle Wilson while
    stringing along Myrtle's husband on a business
    deal. He treats Myrtle even worse than Daisy
    because in his eyes Daisy is worth a three
    hundred thousand dollar pearl necklace while
    Myrtle is worth a dog leash. With that fact in
    mind it is reasonable to assume Fitzgerald is
    telling us that Tom considers Myrtle to be his
    pet.

19
  • Jordan Baker
  • Jordan is the woman in this story who connects
    Gatsby to Nick and consequently Gatsby to Daisy.
    Jordan is also a friend of Daisy's while she has
    something going with Nick during the story. She
    has short hair and plays golf, which back in the
    twenty's was uncommon for women. Therefore you
    can assume she acts like a guy. She is very into
    the Roaring Twenty's party scene and is
    carelessly going through life. The carelessness
    comes out when she's driving with Nick. Nick
    You're a rotten driver, either you ought to be
    more careful or you oughtn't to drive at all
    Suppose you met somebody just as careless as
    yourself? Jordan I hope I never will, I hate
    careless people. That's why I like you. This
    also tags her as a hypocrite because she is
    clearly a careless person herself.

20
  • Myrtle Wilson
  • She's the woman Tom is having an affair with. She
    let's Tom push her around and treat her however
    he wants and she likes it. Tom has all the money
    and leads the life she wants to be a part of. She
    always thought she should have done better than
    her current husband and having an affair with Tom
    reinforces this belief of hers. Her current
    husband, George Wilson, is just a poor gas
    station owner in the Valley of Ashes who had to
    borrow a tuxedo for his wedding. Myrtle would
    rather be treated like a dog by someone who has
    money instead of being cared for by someone who
    has no money.

21
  • George Wilson
  • George is married to a woman who resents him and
    is having an affair right under his nose without
    him knowing it. He runs a gas station, which he
    lives above, in the Valley of Ashes which is the
    dirtiest area of New York. George Wilson is just
    the hard luck guy in this novel, and he ends up
    taking it out on someone else in the end.

22
  • Meyer Wolfsheim
  • While he may not be a major part of this novel he
    serves a purpose. He is Gatsby's connection to
    organized crime. He is the link that connects
    Gatsby to how he gained all his money. In this
    novel he is the one that fixed the World Series
    of 1919. He is also a close friend of Gatsby's.

23
AIREDALE
24
  • GREAT NECK, NY, basis for West/East Egg
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