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The Great Gatsby

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The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald September 24, 1896 - December 10, 1940 Early Years Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (named after Francis Scott Key, author of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Great Gatsby


1
The Great Gatsby
  • F. Scott Fitzgerald
  • September 24, 1896 - December 10, 1940

2
Early Years
  • Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (named after Francis
    Scott Key, author of the United States' national
    anthem "The Star Spangled Banner")
  • Born in 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota to an upper
    middle class Irish Catholic family.
  • 1913 - entered Princeton University, but was not
    a good student and didnt finish school
  • 1917 Fitzgerald left Princeton to join the army.

3
Just out of his reach
  • 1918 - While in Montgomery, Alabama, he met Zelda
    Sayre, daughter of a wealthy Alabama family. A
    year later they were engaged, but Zelda broke it
    off a few months later because she couldnt marry
    anyone who couldnt financially support her.
  • Fitzgerald sets out to earn her love by earning
    .

4
Winning Zelda
  • 1919 - F. Scott Discharged from army and moved
    to New York City. Worked in advertising and wrote
    his first novel The Romantic Egoist. It was
    rejected by Charles Scribner, but after three
    revisions they published it as This Side Of
    Paradise (1920) and it became one of the most
    popular books of the year.
  • He and Zelda married on April 3, 1920, at St
    Patrick's Cathedral in New York City. Their
    daughter Frances Scott 'Scottie' was born in
    1922.
  • They lived the lifestyle of the rich and famous,
    constantly entertaining.
  • Zelda flirtatious Fitzgerald jealous
  • It was the beginning of a turbulent life
    together.

5
Lavish Lifestyle
  • Zelda embraced the flapper lifestyle, dressing
    provocatively and smoking cigarettes
  • Together they enjoyed the free-thinking,
    materialistic pursuits of the roaring twenties
    when the post-war American economy was booming.
  • 1920s prohibition, however, there was plenty
    of alcohol in the Fitzgerald household.
  • 1927 - The Fitzgeralds rented a 27 bedroom
    mansion and drunken parties ensued. Fitzgerald
    was increasingly turning to alcohol, sometimes
    becoming abusive. Zelda often acted out
    impetuously, embarrassing herself in front of
    friends and strangers.

6
Health and Marriage Suffering
  • 1930 - While in North Africa, Zelda had a nervous
    breakdown and was later diagnosed with
    schizophrenia. For the next few years she was in
    and out of clinics in Switzerland.
  • Meanwhile, Fitzgerald used his wife's mental
    breakdowns and their overall dysfunctional
    relationship in his writings.

7
F. Scott the script writer
  • Finances become very difficult for them.
  • 1931 - Although he claimed to detest it,
    Fitzgerald moved to California to write scripts
    for MGM.
  • 1938 - Fitzgeralds contract with MGM was not
    renewed, however, several other film companies
    hired him to do freelance work. But Fitzgerald's
    alcoholism continually interfered with his life
    and work, requiring hospitalization at times.

8
Toward the end
  • 1940 - Still struggling with her illness, Zelda
    moved back to America and went to live with her
    mother.
  • In November Fitzgerald suffers a heart attack and
    a month later, on 21 December 1940, he died of a
    second heart attack in Hollywood, California.
  • 1948 - Zelda died in a fire at the Highland
    Hospital in Asheville, North Carolina.

9
His Works
  • Novels
  • This Side of Paradise (1920)
  • The Beautiful and the Damned (1922)
  • The Great Gatsby (1925)
  • Tender is the Night (1934)
  • The Last Tycoon (1941 unfinished)
  • He also published numerous short stories and
    short story collections including The Curious
    Case of Benjamin Button

10
The Great Gatsby
  • It is the crowning achievement of Fitzgeralds
    career.
  • "There's no such thing...as a flawless novel. But
    if there is, this is it.
  • Charles Jackson, author

11
Setting
  • 1920s aka The Jazz Age
  • This era lasted from the end of WWI to the Stock
    Market Crash in 1929

12
General Characteristics of the Jazz Age
  • Financial prosperity moral uncertainty
  • First Youth Rebellion youth questioned all
    morals and lived only for the moment
  • is easily available boom period
  • Travel a way of life. A wandering, aimless
    lifestyle was the norm
  • Raging fads dance contests, goldfish swallowing
    and flagpole sitting
  • Parties were important. The wilder, the better
  • Prohibition of alcohol was in effect, but the
    sale consumption of liquor was openly flaunted.

13
The 18th Amendment
  • No person shall on or after the date when the
    18th Amendment to the Constitution of the United
    States goes into effect, manufacture, sell,
    barter, transport, import, export, deliver,
    furnish, or process any intoxicating liquor
    except as authorized by this act.
  • title ii, section 3, National Prohibition Act

14
Plot basics
  • Plot a story within a story
  • Narrator 3rd person, limited Nick Carraway
    tells his version of Jay Gatsbys life
  • Nick is unsettled by the Buchanans' seemingly
    purposeless lives and hates Gatsbys values.
    However, he comes to see something heroic in
    Gatsbys vision.
  • This conflict in Nick reflects America's own loss
    of innocence in the face of the crass materialism
    of the 1920s.

15
  • Nick is Daisys second cousin once removed
  • The child of one's first cousin is one's first
    cousin once removed because the one generation
    separation represents one removal.
  • See next slide for info

16
(No Transcript)
17
Major Topics to Examine
  • The American Dream
  • American morality in the 1920s
  • Emptiness created by materialism
  • Society and class
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