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F Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby and The Roaring Twenties The Roaring Twenties The decade of the twenties is often referred to as the “ Jazz Age’. However, the term has much as much to do with the jazzy atmosphere of the time as with the music. Jazz • Prohibition brought many jazz musicians north from New Orleans to Chicago and New York. • Jazz became the soundtrack of rebellion for a younger generation Jazz Style & Fashion • Flappers were typical young girls of the twenties, usually with bobbed hair, short skirts, rolled stockings, and powdered knees. • They danced the night away doing the Charleston and the Black Bottom. Jazzy Talk -Twenties Slang • • • • • • • • • • All Wet - wrong Bee’s Knees - a superb person Big Cheese -an important person Bump Off - to murder Dumb Dora - a stupid girl Flat Tire - a dull, boring person Gam - a girls leg Hooch - bootleg liquor Hoofer - chorus girl Torpedo - a hired gunman Symphonic Jazz and Gatsby • George Gershwin wrote both classical and popular music • He was the first composer to combine jazz and classical music with Rhapsody in Blue in1924 • Was this Vladimir Tostoff’s “Jazz History of the World”? Lifestyles and fashions of the 1920s • • • • • • • • No more Victorian Values Flappers Collegiate Students Independent women Gaiety Increasing wealth Social mobility Alcohol consumption Prohibition • The Volstead Act • 18th Amendment (1919) • Bootleggers – Sold, bought, consumed alcohol. – Gangsters and organized crime Media and Technology • The Automobile – the car is available to many • Mass Media – Magazines and literacy • Reader’s Digest • Time – Radios and advertising – New forms of narrative • Movie - “talkies” e.g. The Jazz Singer F Scott Fitzgerald • From prominent American stock • Attended Princeton but left without graduating • Missed WWI • Met Zelda but couldn’t afford to marry her • Published This Side of Paradise in 1920 at the age of 24: instant stardom • Wrote “money-making” popular fiction for most of his life, mainly for the New York Post: $4000 a story (which equates to about $50,000 today) • He and Zelda were associated with high living of the Jazz Age Fitzgerald cont’d • Wrote what is considered his masterpiece, The Great Gatsby, in Europe in 1924-25 • Zelda becomes mentally unstable • Moved to Hollywood as a screen writer • Dies almost forgotten aged 45 • Zelda perished in a mental hospital fire in 1948 • Only became a “literary great” in the 1960s Literature of the 1920s • Authors wrote about their personal lives as something “knowable”. • Gatsby contains a great deal of autobiographical material and references to the 1920s. • Fitzgerald was also influenced by Modernist theories about art. Activity Create a twenty line dialogue using fifteen terms from the 1920s slang dictionary. You may use up to three characters. Now you’re on the trolley! The Modernist Era • Rejection of Romanticism and the advent of moral uncertainty – the catastrophe of World War I – (the wasteland and valley of ashes) • Embracing the new i.e. mechanization and industrialization – (Gatsby’s car) – new (replaceable) fashions – mass entertainment • Using new means of Representation – the development of cinema, – the mass media and advertising Modernism and Nick Carraway • Because of the chaos there was a longing for order. • The modernist generation produced utopian ideologies such as communism, fascism, and futurism. • Look at Nick in his retreat from the modern word. • “I wanted the world to be in uniform and to stand to a sort of moral attention forever” Modernism and Romanticism Nick Gatsby Fitzgerald and Modernism • Modernists mistrusted the possibility of absolute truth and idealism. • Consider the multiple and limited points-of-view employed in Gatsby. What effect does this have on the concept of absolute truth? • How does Nick force us to view the “reality” that he portrays? • In modernist literature “loose ends” were embraced rather resolved clearly. What does this suggest about the truth? • Does Fitzgerald do this with The Great Gatsby?