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F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby

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F. Scott Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby. Background. Born in St. Paul, Minnesota The dominant influences on F. Scott Fitzgerald were aspiration, literature, Princeton, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, and alcohol (Univ. of South Carolina) Married wealthy Zelda, daughter of Alabama Supreme Court judge. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: F. Scott Fitzgerald

F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Great Gatsby

Page 2: F. Scott Fitzgerald

Background

• Born in St. Paul, Minnesota• The dominant influences on F. Scott

Fitzgerald were aspiration, literature, Princeton, Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, and alcohol (Univ. of South Carolina)

• Married wealthy Zelda, daughter of Alabama Supreme Court judge

Page 3: F. Scott Fitzgerald

• He wrote The Great Gatsby during the summer and fall in Valescure near St. Raphael, but the marriage was damaged by Zelda’s involvement with a French naval aviator.

• sales of Gatsby were disappointing, though the stage and movie rights brought additional income.

Page 4: F. Scott Fitzgerald

• His wife suffered a series of breakdowns and had to be hospitalized

• He was unable to write any longer after suffering several professional failures

• F. Scott Fitzgerald died believing himself a failure. The obituaries were condescending, and he seemed destined for literary obscurity.

Page 5: F. Scott Fitzgerald

Other Notable Works

• This Side of Paradise• The Beautiful and Damned • Wrote many stories for The Saturday

Evening Post – Fitzgerald’s peak story fee of $4,000 from The

Saturday Evening Post may have had in 1929 the purchasing power of $40,000 in present-day dollars.

Page 7: F. Scott Fitzgerald

Symbols from The Great Gatsby

The Valley of Ashes

Moral and social decay caused by uninhibited pursuit of happiness and wealth

Page 8: F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Green Light

• Gatsby’s hopes and dreams for future with Daisy

• Generalized ideal of American dream

Page 9: F. Scott Fitzgerald

• God is watching with disapproval (????)– Judging American society as a moral

wasteland• Yellow is color of wealth = corruption and

greed• Arbitrary meaning of symbols

Page 10: F. Scott Fitzgerald

Geography

• East Egg = old aristocracy

• West Egg = self-made rich

Gold vs. Silver

Page 11: F. Scott Fitzgerald

“For the eye sees not itself, but by reflection, by some other things.”---

Brutus in Julius Caesar

What qualities do the “east eggers” see in others that they don’t see in themselves?– Do they see the moral disintegration within

themselves?

What about the “west eggers?”

Page 12: F. Scott Fitzgerald

Themes from Gatsby

• Decline of American Dream• Old money vs. New money• Idealized Perfection• Juxtaposition of Old and New Money

– Old $ has taste, class, but lack heart and consideration

– New $ considered vulgar, gaudy, ostentatious, and lacking grace, but are sincere and loyal