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The Great Gatsby

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Title: The Great Gatsby Author: bhusd Last modified by: Kinney, Tracy Created Date: 2/3/2003 10:48:43 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Great Gatsby


1
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2
F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • Wrote novel
  • Married Zelda Sayre (who was later
    institutionalized)
  • Died at an early age
  • Named the Jazz Age

3
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4
The Jazz Age
  • Began soon after the end
  • of WWI
  • Attitudes about life changed after the war to
    end all wars
  • The brutality and carnage (gatling gun, gas
    warfare) inspired a lost generation
  • Large demographic change and industrial revolution

5
Prohibition
  • 18th Amendment to the Constitution prohibiting
    the sale, transportation,
  • and manufacturing of alcohol.
  • Enacted in 1919 and quickly gave rise to
    organized crime in the U.S.
  • Bootleggers became wealthy celebrities

6
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7
Infamous Criminals during Prohibition
  • Al Scarface Capone
  • Arnold Rothstein, was the inspiration for Meyer
    Wolfsheim in The Great Gatsby

8
Main Characters
  • Nick Carraway - Narrator of the story. He tells
    the story from a first person perspective but
    withholds judgment on the characters. Young bond
    salesman recently graduated from New Haven who
    lives next door to Jay Gatsby.

9
Jay Gatsby
  • Wealthy Long Island party giver. Owns a
    magnificent estate in the newly rich West Egg
    (Great Neck).
  • Rumors abound about his background, but most
    people only know that he throws amazing parties.

10
The Buchanans
  • Tom and Daisy have a privileged old money
    lifestyle but a troubled marriage.
  • Daisy is a cousin of Nick Carraway and a distant
    associate of Jay Gatsby.
  • Tom went to Yale with Nick but had a reputation
    as a cruel person.
  • They live in East Egg (old money)

11
The Wilsons
  • Myrtle and George live in the Valley of Ashes
  • Myrtle is having an affair with Tom Buchanan and
    sees Tom as a way out of the lower middle class

12
Use of Setting
  • author establishes decline of dream through
    setting for novel
  • division of East and West Egg
  • symbolism of Valley of Ashes
  • set at time of prohibition where fortunes made
    quickly by illegal means

13
Themes
  • Decline of the American Dream in the 20th Century
  • Importance of Dreams

14
Motifs
  • Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or
    literary devices that can help to develop and
    inform the texts major themes.
  •  

15
Geography
  • In Chapters 3 and 4 the old money feeling of East
    Egg and the new jazzy money of West Egg, as
    epitomized by Gatsby's party, are brought to the
    forefront.  Fitzgerald's descriptions of Gatsby's
    party guests gives us a better idea of how the
    old and the new rich are divided.  Notice how the
    gentler and more romantic parts of the novel take
    place on Long Island (both the Eggs), while the
    most serious conflicts often take place in New
    York City.
  • In Chapter 4 Gatsby is pulled over for speeding
    in the Valley of Ashes.  Gatsby simply waves a
    card at the policeman and the officer lets Gatsby
    go apparently the chief of police owes him a
    favor.  The advantages of being rich are
    reinforced by the location of this incident it
    occurs in the valley of ashes, where the poor
    live their unprivileged lives.  This contrast
    intensifies our image of Gatsby's charmed
    existence and all that money can buy.

16
Weather
  • We are in mid-summer, everything is sunny and
    happy.  Or is it?  After summer always comes
    winter.

17
Narrative Style
  • Fitzgerald uses narrator as objective viewpoint
  • Nick is an outsider ( from west)
  • Reliable , honest , slow to pass judgment
  • Told in first person to allow his thoughts

18
Paradox of Gatsby
  • Nicks contrasting views given at start of novel
  • Fitzgeralds build up of Gatsby before his entry
  • Various rumors
  • Extreme wealth but doesnt appear at parties
  • very low key entry

19
Society Built Upon Status
  • Tom and Daisy have money and status
  • George Wilson has neither
  • Gatsby has money but little status
  • Nick has status through birth but little money
  • Lack of morality in rich accepted yet Gatsby
    condemned

20
Gatsbys Dreams 1
  • Introduced through symbolism of
  • green light
  • contrast between intensity of Gatsbys dream and
    shallowness of Tom and Daisy
  • contrast shown in depiction of characters

21
Gatsbys Dreams 2
  • idyllic quality of past (cloak of uniform)
  • need to obtain money to win Daisy
  • irony that she isnt worth the effort
  • climactic scene in hotel
  • contrast between Gatsbys tragic death and Tom /
    Daisys selfish reaction

22
Final Verdict
  • Fitzgeralds approval of Gatsby shown by
  • Nicks assessment of Gatsby / Tom and Daisy
  • Romantic tone of last few paragraphs linking
    Gatsbys dreams with those of original settlers

23
Long Island and Manhattan
24
The End
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