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The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald. Social and Historical Background The Context. The Great Gatsby.
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The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald Social and Historical Background The Context
The Great Gatsby • ‘In 1922 F Scott Fitzgerald announced his decision to write ‘something new – extraordinary and beautiful and simple and intricately patterned.’ Self made millionaire Jay Gatsby embodies some of Fitzgerald’s and his country’s most abiding obsessions; money, ambition, greed and the promise of new beginnings.’ From review of The Great Gatsby The Lost Generation bookstore (online)
The Great Gatsby • Published in 1925 • Significantly sandwiched between WW1 and WW2 • An American novel
1920’s America • Fitzgerald is renowned for chronicling the Jazz Age • This was the decade that followed the First World War • This time was also know as The Golden Twenties or the Roaring Twenties
1920’s America • These years were full of pleasure seeking and reckless exuberance • Fitzgerald said “America was going on the greatest, gaudiest spree in history and there was going to be plenty to tell about it.”
1920’s America • Some people considered this age to be the ‘Lost Generation’ • A generation disillusioned by the senseless slaughter of WW1, they were cynical and disdainful of Victorian Notions and propriety of their elders • Ernest Hemingway captured the essence of this Lost Generation in his novel The Sun Also Rises (1926)
1920’s Culture Charlie Chaplin Edward Hopper Nighthawks Picasso Silent Movies Matisse Kandinsky
Music/Jazz • Duke Ellington • Cole Porter • Gershwin • Maurice Chevalier
Writers • Ernest Hemingway • Gertrude Stein • Henry Miller • T S Eliot • Dorothy Parker
The Mass Market • Population of USA doubled 50yrs before WW1 • There was a problem with meeting basic needs • Solution – Mass production. Henry Ford was the first to use an assembly line to make Model T cars in 1913
The Mass Market • There was massive growth in commodities • There was standardization across the country • Everything was made available to everyone • Therefore most people wanted…
Advertising • As a result Advertising became big business • Brand names were more prominent • Advertising created the desire for purchasing • The taste of the nation was shaped…
Conspicuous Consumption • A term coined by an American social scientist • A response to the over whelming amount of rich businessmen with power in America • They showed off their wealth with ostentatious houses and extravagant behaviour
Conspicuous Consumption • Veblen called this ‘Conspicuous Consumption’ because he thought the lifestyle was wasteful and caused more poverty in the lower classes • People liked to announce their status, never caring about the effect on others
Prohibition and Organised Crime • From 1920 to 1933, the manufacture, sale, and transport of alcohol was prohibited in the United States • It was intended to raise the country’s moral standards • It had the opposite effect! • Apparently in 1925 there were 100,000 speakeasies in New York alone
Prohibition and Organised Crime • Bootlegging became big business • Criminals, such as Al Capone made their fortunes producing and selling illegal alcohol • There was an illegal economy organised by powerful gangs • Money was made through gambling and protection rackets
Women • In the Jazz Age the Flapper was born • The typical Flapper was a young woman who was thought of as fast and maybe even a little brazen • She symbolized an age anxious to enjoy itself…
Again, a Hollywood interpretation, but listen closely to the words…
1920’s America The End