The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight. Four o’clock Gatsby tells Nick the following morning: I waited, and about four o’clock she came to the window and stood.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Gatsby Jeopardy.
Advertisements

Form, Time and Sight The Great Gatsby. Fitzgeralds Chapter Structure Chapter 1 and 2: – Dinner party at the Buchanans – Party with Myrtle and McKees –
Kelso High School English Department. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Symbolism in The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby Chapter 9.
Take out a sheet of paper and title: Final Review: The Great Gatsby ChapterSummaryQuotation
The Great Gatsby Chapter Seven. The Party is Over.
Kelso High School English Department. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Great Gatsby Seminar By: AJ Bossio & Josh Martenstyn.
Chapters 7-8 Characterization Characterization Note throughout the story that Daisy’s voice is her most seductive and distinctive trait: “an arrangement.
Chapter 8 Summery and Notes

Critical Essay.  Choose a novel or short story in which the fate of the main character is important in conveying the writer’s theme.  Explain what you.
Writing a Literary Analysis. Character Analysis (for example, but this would apply to whatever you’ve chosen to analyze) While reading a story, choose.
The Great Gatsby Themes.
Comprehension Check Chapter 7
The Great Gatsby Content and Vocabulary Review
THE GREAT GATSBY Final Exam Review.
Literary Analysis The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald.
THE GREAT GATSBY F. SCOTT FITZGERALD. CHAPTER 1, OPENING WORDS In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I’ve been turning.
The Great Gatsby can be viewed in one of three ways: A veiled autobiographical account of Fitzgerald’s life A bitter criticism of the American Dream An.
The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Great Gatsby Project
The Great Gatsby can be viewed in one of three ways: A veiled autobiographical account of Fitzgerald’s life A bitter criticism of the American Dream An.
Poetry Analysis.
The Great Gatsby Chapter 7.
Motifs, Motifs, Motifs.
The Great Gatsby Chapter 8.
Winter Dreams F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Obsessive love in The Great Gatsby By Lauren. In The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby is portrayed as a naive and heartbroken man who will do anything to revive.
Jeopardy The Great Gatsby Final Jeopardy 200 CharactersSymbolsPlot Quotes: Who said it and about whom/what was it.
The Great Gatsby Discussion Questions.
The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight. Learning Intentions Understand the importance of 4 o’clock in the novel and what it symbolises Understand the importance.
+ The Great Gatsby Chapter 8 Summary and Analysis May 2011.
Prompt #1: The American Dream
The Great Gatsby Chapter 8.
Brainstorm motifs and symbols, and then analyze the themes developed through each one.
Chapter 7. Climax: Confrontation between Gatsby and Tom.
Chapter 7 Summary and Notes
Kelso High School English Department. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight. Learning Intentions Understand the importance of 4 o’clock in the novel and what it symbolises Think about the relationship.
Sight Words.
Chapters 8 and 9 Discussion
Chapter 6. The rumors about Gatsby continue to circulate in New York. Nick has learned the truth about Gatsby’s early life and now interrupts his story.
Gatsby Bellringer # 84/25/12 START THIS BELLRINGER ON A NEW SHEET OF PAPER. YOU WILL TURN IN BELLRINGERS 1-7 TODAY. 1. What landmark “watches” over the.
Chapter Eight Characterisation Gatsby, Nick Theme American Dream Symbolism.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald Study Questions for the novel.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Born in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1896, Fitzgerald became the spokes person for the “Lost Generation” of the 1920s. Highly educated in.
The American Dream/ Chapter One.  When you see the word/ phrase, write down the first thing that comes into your mind.
Motifs and Color Symbolism in The Great Gatsby Mr. RodgersENG 9 March 2015.
Grief and The Great Gatsby. Grief links to Gatsby in the idea of the loss of love – Daisy is all that Gatsby dreams of but yet he doesn’t get to have.
Preclude (v) to prevent from happening; to make impossible Her extreme fear of heights precludes any chance of ever going skydiving.
Character OverviewsMore Information Character OverviewsMore Information ThemesSpecial Thanks ThemesSpecial Thanks Motifs Symbols.
The Great Gatsby: Chapter 7 Analysis
“The Great Gatsby” Expository Essay. The American Dream a) What is Fitzgerald’s portrayal of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby? What are its attractions.
Iceberg Theory List two pieces of information that we know even though Nick does not directly tell us. Give text that supports your inference. How do we.
TOP 3  #23  #7  #12. ORGANIZING YOUR INTRO The guide for your whole paper.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Chapter Eight Characterisation Gatsby, Nick Theme American Dream Symbolism.
Introduction This paragraph is crucial. Include the following information: identify the text and author use words from the beginning of the question and.
The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight.
Gatsby Chapter 6 thoughts.
The Great Gatsby Chapter 8.
The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight.
Chapter Eight Characterisation Gatsby, Nick Theme American Dream
Gatsby Revision Session.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight.
Using Multiple Sources to Make an Inference (Refer to handout)
Gatsby Quotes Chapter 8.
Chapter Eight.
Presentation transcript:

The Great Gatsby Chapter Eight

Four o’clock Gatsby tells Nick the following morning: I waited, and about four o’clock she came to the window and stood there or a minute and then turned out the light. The time of 4 o’clock recurs at significant points in the novel: Daisy is reunited with Gatsby at 4 o’clock in the afternoon in chapter 5, she symbolically ‘turns out the light’ during his hero-quest vigil outside her house in the previous chapter, and he later dies at around four in the afternoon. This motif perhaps recurs in order to point out the sympathetic pattern of nature, as it responds to Gatsby’s life. We have already seen how the weather reflects Gatsby’s fortune – now it seems that the cyclical pattern of the day seems to beat in tune to his points of crisis.

The Attraction to Daisy In Gatsby’s narrative, at least we begin to understand his obsession for her. She represents wealth and privilege and we know that Gatsby has long idolized materialism. Daisy, is for Gatsby the physical embodiment of this. Her voice represents the spiritual side of materialism, the very essence of his dream. However, by investing such enormous power in Daisy, Gatsby’s dream is reduced to a mere motivation for material gain.

The Attraction to Daisy The first thing that attracted Gatsby was Daisy’s wealth – her house in particular (‘there was a ripe mystery about it’). This removes the idea that he was attracted to Daisy in herself. He was – and still is – attracted to the ‘money’ in her. He liked the fact that she had been enjoyed by other men when he first met her – ‘It increased her value in his eyes’. Note his early tendency to treat her like an object. He conceives of her as almost a piece of property. Do we admire this quality in him? Gatsby never intended to fall in love with Daisy. He had initially intended to ‘take what he could and go’. His intentions at the start were not noble.

The Attraction to Daisy He was a ‘penniless man without a past’ when he first met her. In the course of the novel, we find that not matter how well Gatsby can fix the first fault, he cannot fix the second. The affair was doomed from the beginning. Gatsby was clearly guilty of DUPLICITY in his initial affair with Daisy: He had certainly taken her under false pretences… he had deliberately given Daisy a false sense of security he let her believe that he was a person from the same social strata as herself – that he was fully able to take care of her.

Gatsby The idea of the pursuit of Daisy is not really the pursuit of an ordinary woman, but a DREAM – the American Dream of prosperity and self- improvement. By seeking out Daisy, Gatsby seeks out a spiritual dream. By pursuing the ‘spiritual’ beauty of what Daisy represents by having the idealism to dedicate himself to something that is beyond him, Gatsby renews our faith in human nature. He reminds us of our capacity to hope.

Nick and Gatsby Although Nick again asserts that he disapproved of Gatsby “from beginning to end”, there is a definite shift between the two. Nick feels almost paternal and protective towards him – what is he protecting him from? Daisy? Himself? His delusions? Undoubtedly there is a new sense of vulnerability within Gatsby which has perhaps not been seen before and Nick shows him kindness at a time in society when there was very little of it. It is significant that Gatsby is open and truthful – there is obviously some sense of subconscious realisation within him but Gatsby is only confessing these truths in order to keep his dream alive – his own consciousness and devotion to his dream will never allow him to accept it is dead.

Nick and Gatsby Discuss the following quotes with your group and explain why you think Nick said this and what it tells you about his feelings towards Gatsby: “They’re a rotten crowd…you’re worth the whole damn bunch put together.” “I’ve always been glad I said that. It was the only compliment I ever gave him, because I disapproved of him from beginning to end.”

Nick and Gatsby Nick sees Gatsby as a man of vision and ideals. He is someone to be admired above the trivial selfishness of others. Nick observes that in his disillusionment Gatsby ‘must have felt that he had lost the old warm world, paid a high price for living too long with a single dream’. There is a verbal echo here of Nick’s earlier remark that after the war the Midwest was no longer for him ’the warm centre of the world’. There is a shared experience of displacement, which draws the men together.

Nick and Gatsby Nick notes: “Gatsby was overwhelmingly aware of the youth and mystery that wealth imprisons and preserves, of the freshness of many clothes and of Daisy, gleaming like silver, safe and proud above the hot struggles of the poor.” This is an extremely important quotation (memorise!) which highlights not only the unfairness of the class system in America but also the limitations that even enormous wealth can bring. This is directly linked to the main theme of the novel. Look at the use of the word “imprisons” – isn’t it ironic that it is the wealthy, rather than the poor who are not free. Again there is a suggestion that the “hot struggles of the poor” is an almost noble pursuit, something empowering, perhaps because it mirrors the early exhausting and back-breaking work of the original pioneers.

The Weather The heat – just like Daisy’s passion for Gatsby – has cooled. The fire in Gatsby’s life has been extinguished and Autumn is inexorably approaching. Gatsby’s insistence on swimming in the pool is an overt attempt to turn back time. His downfall comes as a direct result from his stark refusal to accept what he cannot – the passage of time.

The Eyes of Doctor T J Eckleburg These eyes are again used as a symbol for something else in this chapter. In groups discuss what George Wilson believes the eyes to represent. Think about: How he refers to them. His state of mind and the events that have just taken place. The deeper meaning that could be placed on this.

The Eyes of Doctor T J Eckleburg In Wilson’s confused grief, the eyes briefly, and disturbingly, represent the eyes of God, goading him to tale revenge for Myrtle’s death – ‘God sees everything’. Of course if materialism is the new religion, the advertising billboard does by extension symbolise God. The eyes are ambiguous, but ultimately they look down on a world devoid of meaning, value and beauty – a world where dreams are exposed as illusions, and cruel, undeserving men triumph at the expense of dreamers like Wilson and Gatsby.

Gatsby’s Epiphany and Death In order to truly fulfil the role of tragic hero, Gatsby need to have an epiphany – a moment of total clarity in which he finds enlightenment and accepts his flaw. Read again the moments from when Gatsby ‘shouldered the mattress’ to his death and discuss what you think his epiphany was. It relates to the ‘Dream’.

Gatsby’s Epiphany and Death In his time in the pool, Gatsby is ‘cleansed; of the sins of materialism and has a moment of true realisation. He waits for Daisy’s telephone call until 4 o’clock, the time of his death. He clings to the very last to the idea that Daisy will somehow want him but Nick believes that Gatsby finally realised the truth at the bitter end before his death.

Gatsby’s Epiphany and Death This is deliberately ambiguous, but Nick at least provides this vicariously when he says that Gatsby must have realized what a grotesque thing a rose is: Perhaps he no longer cared… he must have felt that he had lost the old warm world… he must have looked up at an unfamiliar sky through frightening leaves and shivered as he found what a grotesque thing a rose is and how raw the sunlight was upon the scarcely cut grass. Nick suggests that roses aren’t inherently beautiful, and that people choose to view them that way. Daisy is grotesque in the same way – it is only because Gatsby has invested her with beauty and meaning by making her the object of his dream. It is Gatsby then who has increased Daisy’s value and importance – without him she would merely be yet another bored, idle, rich young women with no moral strength.

Gatsby’s Epiphany and Death Gatsby realises that his dream has been corrupt and full of horror. He realises he has been living in: A new world, material without being real, where poor ghosts, breathing dreams like air, drifted fortuitously about… like that ashen, fantastic figure gliding towards him through the amorphous trees. As Wilson the ghost glides towards him, he sees the reality of the world of the ashes to which Wilson belongs. The ‘new world’ Gatsby has craved is a valley of ashes, unreal and full of pain. In the moments before his death, Nick imagines that Gatsby has realised the emptiness of his dream: the hollowness of Daisy and the horror of the material world.

Central Tragedy The central tragedy of the book is that the best characters – the ones born into poverty and who love idealistically – are cut down by the relentless oppression and selfishness of the rich.