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Journal Topic for Tuesday, April 1 st :. Turn in your research papers! Staple the rubric to the front. Have you ever heard of The Great Gatsby ? Have you ever read it before? If not, what do you know about it? Have you seen the movie? How close is it to the book?. F. Scott Fitzgerald &
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Journal Topic for Tuesday, April 1st: Turn in your research papers! Staple the rubric to the front. Have you ever heard of The Great Gatsby? Have you ever read it before? If not, what do you know about it? Have you seen the movie? How close is it to the book?
F. Scott Fitzgerald& The Great Gatsby
Born September 26, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota • lost 2 sisters to the flu • Led mother to be overprotective • Family was poor, but had some social status • Mother had high social ambitions for her son
Went to private Catholic school, then to Princeton • Developed fascination with the very rich • Writings from college show his self-conscious nature
Commissioned as 2Lt in the Army in 1917 • Worked on revising his 1st book • At age 22, met Zelda Sayre, a local debutante • Got engaged, but broke it off after 2nd rejection
Published This Side of Paradise in 1920 • praised for its originality • Hailed as “the story of the youth of our • generation” • Zelda & Fitzgerald restarted engagement • daughter Frances Scott born in October • 1921
Fitzgerald’s life in the ’20s was a mirror for what was happening nationally • Challenge to the established order • personal indulgence • self-destructive excess • Fitzgerald was self-proclaimed spokesman and symbol
Roaring Twenties • Economy booming • America partied • Organized crime • Prohibition Act • Decline of moral standards
A Time of Optimism • Laissez faire economy • Rapid growth of industry and mechanization • Wide distribution of blessings of civilization • Electricity • Automobile • New “Golden Age” of America
A Time of Optimism • Laissez faire economy • Rapid growth of industry and mechanization • Wide distribution of blessings of civilization • Electricity • Automobile • New “Golden Age” of America
Critics • “decline and degradation” • Caught up in a “surge of materialism;” people failed to grasp the meaning and significance of life • Disillusioned, disenchanted, lost faith in life and possibility of social progress • Total lack of interest in politics
Social Atmosphere of Change • Prohibition • 18th Amendment prohibited production & sale of alcohol • Still sold & produced illegally • Bathtub gin • Speakasies • Bootleggers • Rise of gangsters like Al Capone
Social Atmosphere of Change • Women’s Rights • 19th Amendment (1920) gave women the right to vote • 9 million women in the workforce • Women “bobbed” their hair • Could drink & smoke in • public • Liberated women called • “flappers”
Fitzgerald and his wife had fallen to this lifestyle • Loose morals, and nothing left to believe in • Excessive drinking, partying, & spending • Well-known for their glamorous and “unsettled” lives • Wrote The Beautiful and the Damned” highlighting this lifestyle
The Great Gatsby • Wrote two collections of short stories; both critical failures • Changed focus to serious, even tragic works addressing broad • historical and social issues • The Great Gatsby born of this • A quintessential story of not only the 1920’s, • but the American experience, the novel • chronicles the exuberance and the malaise of • the decade • Shows how America’s fascination with • material things erodes values • shows ultimate failure of the American Dream
It describes an attitude of hope and faith that looks forward to the fulfillment of human wishes and desires. “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” WHAT IS THE AMERICAN DREAM?
Poverty • Discrimination • Exploitation • Hypocrisy • Corruption • Suppression FAILURE OF THE AMERICAN DREAM
Later Life • Alcoholic since age 22 • earned dubious title “America’s Drunkest Writer” • as ‘20s came to a close, so did Fitzgerald’s career • wife Zelda suffered many complete mental breakdowns • 4th book, Tender is the Night, based on his wife’s mental • illness • Wrote short stories, magazine articles, screenplays to pay • wife’s mounting medical bills • Died from heart attack December 21st, 1940, at age 44 • Zelda died in hospital fire in 1948 at the age of 48 • wasn’t until after WWII that Gatsby became popular
Fitzgerald and Zelda are buried together in St. Mary’s Cemetery in Rockville, Maryland. The last sentence of The Great Gatsby is inscribed on their grave marker. “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”
Gatsby in film 1949 – starring Allan Ladd, Betty Field, Shelley Winters, MacDonald Carey.
1974 – starring Robert Redford, Mia Farrow, Bruce Dern, Karen Black, Sam Waterson. Screenplay by Francis Ford Coppola.
1995 – A&E made-for-TV movie starring Mira Sorvino, Toby Stevens, Paul Rudd.
- Dec. 21, 2012 - starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Carey Mulligan, Tobey McGuire, Isla Fisher. Blu-Ray, 3D, DVD - 2 Oscar wins