ENGL1001 – American Literature F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby (1925) Dr. John Masterson 1 st Lecture July-August 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Is it possible to get a second chance at life
Advertisements

F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby About the Author Born-September 24, 1896 Born-September 24, 1896 Died-December 21, 1940 Died-December 21, 1940.
Born-September 24, 1896 Died-December 21, 1940 Married Zelda Sayre Famous works include The Great Gatsby And Winter Dreams, which well also read.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Colton Sledge 2 nd Period US History.
APPLAUSE 4 I know that voice…
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, and the Roaring 20’s Mr. Moccia’s English III IB.
By F. Scott Fitzgerald.  Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald  Born in 1896, St. Paul, Minnesota  Named after famous, second cousin Francis Scott Key.
The Great Gatsby Seminar By: AJ Bossio & Josh Martenstyn.
Born into an upper-class family in St. Paul, Minnesota in Was encouraged to become a writer at the age of 15, and seriously began to hone his craft.
Fitzgerald’s Life and Times
Published: 1925 Setting: Long Island and New York City - Summer 1922.
The Great Gatsby The 1920s – ‘The Jazz Age’. Fitzgerald was the most famous chronicler of 1920s America, an era that he dubbed “the Jazz Age.” Written.
The Great Gatsby Themes.
The novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby About the Author Born-September 24, 1896 Born-September 24, 1896 Died-December 21, 1940 Died-December 21, 1940.
Hana Hančíková.  he was born in Minnesota in 1896  his family inspired him to write a novel The Great Gatsby  his father came from a wealthy upper-class.
F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography Fitzgerald was named after his distant relative, Francis Scott Key. Fitzgerald was born.
“An author ought to write for the youth of his generation, the critics of the next and the schoolmasters of ever afterward.” F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Literature of the 20 th Century. The 20 th Century  World War I / The Great War ( ) World War II ( ) modern technology, inventions 
The Great Gatsby by F Scott Fitzgerald Social and Historical Background The Context.
Gatsby Bellringer # Define what you think is the “stereotypical” American Dream. 2. Where do you think this idea of the American Dream comes.
 F. Scott Fitzgerald › Grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota › As a young army lieutenant stationed in the South, he met Zelda Sayre.  Turbulent marriage,
F. Scott Fitzgerald. A little bit about F. Scott …  Born in Minnesota; (age 44)  Published 4 novels, 160 short stories  Named the 1920’s.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
About the Author F. Scott Fitzgerald Born-September 24, 1896 Died-December 21, 1940 Married Zelda Sayre Famous works include The Great Gatsby The Beautiful.
By Sophie Ingledew and Daria Wolf. ♫ Jazz originated around 1895 in New Orleans ♫ Originally it was a mixture of blues and marching band music ♫ Usually.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. A Brief History of F. Scott Fitzgerald Born Sept. 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota Born Sept. 24, 1896 in St.
The Great Gatsby Discussion Questions.
Life in the 1920s. Events in the 1920s  WWI ends on November 11, 1918 (Armistice)  : Known as the Jazz Age  January 1919: 18th Amendment.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald English 11 American Literature.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD THE GREAT GATSBY English III.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. About the Author Born-September 24, 1896 Born-September 24, 1896 Died-December 21, 1940 Died-December 21, 1940.
The Roaring ’20s. Technological Boom “Mass production leads to mass consumption” –Automobiles –Urban Centers Grow.
What makes someone great? Ordering activity. The Great Gatsby IGCSE literature.
The Great Gatsby is often described as the quintessential American novel, meaning it is most reflective of America and Americans. Fitzgerald set out to.
Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald  Born Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald in 1896, to an upper-middle class family in St. Paul, Minnesota.  Spent his childhood.
1920s: The Jazz Age Introduction to The Great Gatsby.
The Great Gatsby Bellringer #1 4/8/13 1.Explain what you think the stereotypical “American Dream” is. Give examples in your definition. 2. Predict: Given.
ENGL1001 – American Literature F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby (1926) Dr. John Masterson 2011.
F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby. Early Life: Born in St. Paul, Minnesota Distant relative of Francis Scott Key His father was a business.
F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography Fitzgerald was named after his distant relative, Francis Scott Key. Fitzgerald was born.
 F. Scott Fitzgerald › Grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota › As a young army lieutenant stationed in the South, he met Zelda Sayre.  Turbulent marriage,
The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896 – 1940)
Ms Smith Mrs Hernandez. THE GREAT GATSBY Define the following: 1) The Roaring 20s – 2) Jazz - 3) Flappers - 4) Prohibition – 5) Gangsters – THINK ABOUT.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. About the Author Born-September 24, 1896 Born-September 24, 1896 Died-December 21, 1940 Died-December 21, 1940.
Jazz Age By: Janice Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby Group of women / photo by Harry M. Rhoads. Source: Library of Congress – American Memory.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby Understanding the times helps to understand the novel.
& INTRO TO THE GREAT GATSBY Modernism. Historical Context World War I 1920-Women gain the right to vote 1920s  alcohol is outlawed  Falling.
The Great Gatsby.
The Great Gatsby A sneak peek at the 1920s lifestyle.
The World of Gatsby: The Roaring Twenties. The “Roaring Twenties” was one of the most significant decades in the history of the United states because.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald English 11 American Literature.
안은진 강예린 The Writers of the “Lost Generation”
The Great Gatsby A look at the Jazz Age, Modernism, and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Reading and Literacy Promotion Through ICT Book of the term by F. Scott Fitzgerald Tender is the Night (1934) Vocational High School of Veterinary Medicine,
Digital Streaming Literature Overview A Glimpse at Readings for the Year.
The Great Gatsby : The American Dream in the Jazz Age By Laura Preble West Hills High School 2006 The American Dream in the Jazz Age By Laura Preble West.
Renáta Ďurčová. one of the greatest American writers of the 20th century, wrote short stories and novels of the Jazz Age member of the Lost Generation.
Literary Modernism. Tenets of Literary Modernism Nonlinearity of plot or sequence (think Inception ) Irony and satire: critique of society Voices and.
ENGL1001 – American Literature F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby (1925) Reading an American “Classic” – Then and Now Dr. John Masterson Consultation.
The Great Gatsby - Context AO4 – understanding of the significance and influence of the contexts in which literary texts are written and received.
F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Great Gatsby
The Great Gatsby and Consumerism.
The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896 – 1940)
The Great Gatsby.
The great gatsby micro teaching and ideas for the classroom by Annette and Serrah,
The Great Gatsby.
The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896 – 1940)
Presentation transcript:

ENGL1001 – American Literature F. Scott Fitzgerald – The Great Gatsby (1925) Dr. John Masterson 1 st Lecture July-August 2010

You can access these presentations through the ENGL1 blog Go to – wordpress.com wordpress.com

Herman Melville, ‘Hawthorne and His Mosses’ 1850 “no American writer should write like an Englishman, or a Frenchman; let him write like a man, for then he will be sure to write like an American … Let us boldly condemn all imitation, though it comes to us graceful and fragrant as the morning, and foster all originality, though, at first, it be crabbed and ugly as our own pine knots.”

F. Scott Fitzgerald ( )

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Obituary ( ) published in The New York Times “The best of his books, the critics said, was The Great Gatsby. When it was published in 1925 this ironic tale of life on Long Island at a time when gin was the national drink and sex the national obsession (according to the exponents of Mr. Fitzgerald’s school of writers), it received critical acclaim. In it Mr. Fitzgerald was at his best, which was, according to John Chamberlain, his “ability to catch the flavor of a period, the fragrance of a night, a snatch of old song, in a phrase.”

Taken from letter written by Fitzgerald to his daughter, cited in Matthew J. Bruccoli, Some Sort of Epic Grandeur – The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1981), p.123. “If you have anything to say, anything you feel nobody has ever said before, you have got to feel it so desperately that you will find some way to say it that nobody has ever found before, so that the thing you have to say and the way of saying it BLEND AS ONE MATTER – as indissolubly as if they were conceived together.”

Some areas to consider when it comes to thinking about texts in relation to their contexts History – time Geography – space/place – spatial context – urban/rural? Questions of regionalism Economic Socio-political Cultural Intellectual – philosophical – the world of ideas Autobiographical/personal

The American Mid-West Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota in Our first person narrator in The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway, is also from the Mid-West.

The American East Coast New York is indicated by the number 4 on this map

F. Scott Fitzgerald

Richard Gray, A History of American Literature (2004), p.435 “Of all American writers concerned with the inventions of Modernism, F. Scott Fitzgerald ( ) was the most autobiographical.” Fitzgerald - “’Sometimes I don’t know whether I’m real or whether I’m a character in one of my own novels.’” “the protagonists of his books … bear an extraordinary resemblance to their creator. In each case, there is the same commitment to flamboyant excess, combined with a very personal kind of idealism; in each case, too, there is a testing, a trying out taking place – of the dreams of power, possibility and wealth that have fuelled America and individual Americans and of how those dreams can be negotiated in a world dedicated to consumption, a surfeit of commodities.”

Fitzgerald’s definition of ‘The Jazz Age’ “a generation grown up to find all Gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken.”

Casualties of WW1 ( )

An Image from ‘the Jazz Age’

From Matthew J. Bruccoli, Some Sort of Epic Grandeur – The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1981), p.133. “Their marriage coincided with the beginning of the Boom, the Era of Wonderful Nonsense, the Roaring Twenties, what Fitzgerald named the Jazz Age and described as “the greatest, gaudiest spree in history.” In point of fact, Fitzgerald knew almost nothing about jazz and did not write about it. His explication of the term in “Echoes of the Jazz Age” (1931) reveals that he used it to connote a mood or psychological condition: “The word jazz in its progress toward respectability has first meant sex, then dancing, then music. It is associated with a state of nervous stimulation, not unlike that of big cities behind the lines of a war.” Fitzgerald began as a spokesman of the Jazz Age and became its symbol. With his capacity for becoming identified with his times, he came to represent the excesses of the Twenties – its Prince Charming and its fool.”

Richard Gray, A History of American Literature (2004), p.435 “Easily as much as any American writer, and more than most, Fitzgerald demonstrates the paradox that to talk of oneself may also be to talk of one’s times, the character of a culture – and that self-revelation, ultimately, can be a revelation of humanity.”

From Matthew J. Bruccoli, Some Sort of Epic Grandeur – The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1981), p.187. “The studies of literary alcoholism are inconclusive. Many of the best American writers of the twentieth century have had alcohol problems: Fitzgerald, Faulkner, O’Neill, O’Hara, Wolfe, Lardner, Hemingway, Lewis, Chandler, Hammett. There is evidently a connection between alcoholism and creative personality; but it remains unclear whether writers drink because they are writers. Writing and drinking are both forms of exhibitionism and escapism.”

ERNEST HEMINGWAY

The Oxford English Dictionary Definition of ‘Prohibition’ “the prevention by law of the manufacture and sale of alcohol in the US from 1920 to 1933.”

Al Capone

An Image from the 1974 film adaptation of The Great Gatsby Robert Redford plays Gatsby while Mia Farrow plays Daisy