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| Fitzgerald, F. Scott: The Great Gatsby
Fitzgerald, F. Scott: The Great Gatsby
The Great
Gatsby
A novel by F. Scott
Fitzgerald
Table of
contents
Introduction p.
2
The author p.
2
Background of the
1920s p. 3
List of characters p.
3
The story p.
4
Interpretation p.
5
- Introduction
This novel is about the
superficiality of rich people. The author also treats the conflict between
upper-class and working-class people, and the sudden destruction of dreams.
Francis Scott Fitzgerald conveys that rich people are not able to love, feelings
are unimportant for their relationships. He shows the problems of young,
talented, ambitious people in a fast-moving consumer society. Some parts of this
dramatic novel are autobiographical.
- The
author
Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald
was born on September 24, 1896, in St. Paul, Minnesota. His private life with
his wife, Zelda, in both America and France became almost as famous as his
novels. The dominant influences on Fitzgerald were aspiration, literature, his
studies in Princeton, his family and alcohol.
In Princeton, he made his
first success with texts, plays and musicals. His first novel This Side of
Paradise was published in 1920. Some short-stories
followed.
After his first journey to
Europe from 1920 to 1921 he wrote another novel The Beautiful and Damned.
In France Fitzgerald completed his brilliant novel The Great Gatsby. This
novel was published in 1925.
The next decade of the
Fitzgerald’s lives was chaotic and unhappy. Fitzgerald’s heavy
drinking was the result of the worsening relationship with his mentally ill
wife. His last novel, The Last Tycoon, was only half completed when
Francis Scott Fitzgerald died of a heart attack on December 21, 1940, in
Hollywood.
- Background of the
1920s
Calvin Coolidge, the
30th president of the U.S. said: “The business of America is
business”.
The United States became a
global economic power, they started to expand strengthening the military. The
film industry in Hollywood provided the dreams for the new American society. The
twenties were the time of prohibition, alcohol was declared illegal, therefore
the black market was booming.
- List of
Characters
Nick
Carraway
He is the main character and
narrator of this novel. The Great Gatsby begins and ends with Nick. His
cousin is Daisy.
Jay
Gatsby
Nick’s neighbour, who
has climbed the social ladder after the war. But his problem is that he chose an
illegal way to earn his fortune. He loves Daisy and wants her
back.
Daisy
Buchanan
Nick’s cousin had an
affair with Gatsby five years ago. As he went away, she could not marry him. She
chose Tom instead.
Tom
Buchanan
Daisy’s husband is a
rich sportsman. He becomes Gatsby’s opponent because he does not want to
lose his wife.
Myrtle
Wilson
She is Tom’s mistress
and George Wilson’s wife.
George
Wilson
He is a car mechanic living
in the neighbourhood.
- The
story
Nick Carraway comes from the
Mid-West of the United States to New York to work as a bondsman. He meets Daisy,
his cousin, and Tom, her husband, a rich sportsman. At the house of her cousin
he gets acquainted with Jordan Baker, a young women. His neighbour on Long
Island is Jay Gatsby who gives great parties.
One day he is invited to one
of these. There he meets Gatsby the first time. They become friends. Gatsby
tells Nick that he wants to meet Daisy, Nick’s second cousin. Nick
arranges a meeting between Gatsby and Daisy. Jordan reveals that Daisy and
Gatsby had an affair five years ago. But Gatsby did not have enough money to
marry and besides he had to go to war. Afterwards she married Tom. But now
Gatsby has enough money and he wants Daisy back. They start
over.
Gatsby wants Daisy to leave
her husband. When Tom gets to know about their affair he tells Daisy about
Gatsby’s criminal past. She is frightened.
One evening a women, Myrtle
Wilson, Tom’s mistress, is run over by Gatsby’s car. She dies, but
she has thrown herself in front of the car. Daisy is the driver and she commits
a hit-and-run offence. Jay Gatsby is willing to take the blame. George Wilson,
the husband of Myrtle, wants to take revenge for the death of his wife. Tom
tells the widower that Gatsby has driven the car. In the evening, Gatsby is
killed, shot dead by George Wilson.
Nick prepares the funeral
but only Gatsby’s father and a former party guest show up. At the end Nick
is tired of life in New York and decides to return to the
Mid-West.
- Interpretation
In principle, Gatsby is a
symbol for the whole American experience. Two classes are portrayed in the novel
The Great Gatsby. The rich people are represented by Jay Gatsby, Tom and
Daisy Buchanan. The human relationships in this society are superficial, they do
not feel anything for each other. They feel superior to the working-class, men
feel superior to women. Real friendships are very rare. Nick and Gatsby are the
exception of the rule. But Jay Gatsby is an impostor, because of his criminal
past he becomes guilty. His parties have only one reason, to arrange a meeting
with Daisy. His dream is a life with Daisy and his love for her. On the one hand
Gatsby is heroic, but on the other he is trivial and common. The best example
for this superficiality is Tom. Daisy’s husband represents the brutality
and moral carelessness of the established rich. He has no
scruples.
The life of the
working-class is shown by the Wilsons, Myrtle and George. In the novel the two
classes get in contact because of the relationship between Myrtle and Tom. They
are speaking a different kind of English. Their brutality is physical (George
kills Gatsby), while the upper class uses psychological brutality (Tom hates
Gatsby too, but he uses George to kill him).
- Scott
Fitzgerald:
The
Great Gatsby (19261/ 1970), London.
Frauke
Frausing:
Der Große Gatsby
(1996), Hollfeld.
Phillip
Northman:
The Great Gatsby, Notes
(19661/ 1996), Lincoln, Nebraska.
Tang Soo
Ping:
Francis Scott Fitzgerald,
The Great Gatsby (19801/ 1994), Burnt Mill, Harlow.
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