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The Great Gatsby: The 1920s and the American Dream

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The Great Gatsby:. The 1920s and the American Dream. A Quick Introduction…. The 20’s: an age of transition. World War I and After - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Great Gatsby:

The Great Gatsby:

The 1920s and the

American Dream

Page 2: The Great Gatsby:

A Quick Introduction…

Page 3: The Great Gatsby:

The 20’s: an age of transition

World War I and After

"The world must be made safe for democracy" Woodrow Wilson the President had declared, "Its peace must be planted upon the tested foundation of political liberty." --- a spirit of idealism Americans entered the war in 1917.

America fought for approx. a year and a half and lost just over 100,000 men to the war (about 40,000 due to influenza pandemic).

War and industrial revolution incredibly vitalized the economy/

Page 4: The Great Gatsby:

The 20’s: an age of transition

World War I and After

There was a general disillusionment among the people which caused nervousness: racism, intolerance, violence, Ku Klux Klan, immigrants, political intolerance

• 1922 foreign policy of Isolationism • 1929 Stock Market Crash • 1932 New Deal era

Page 5: The Great Gatsby:

Post WWI• Standard of living increased for most• Americans abandoned small towns

in exchange for urban living• Economy prospered as Americans

tried to forget troubles of war- frivolous spending- illegal liquor- immorality

Page 6: The Great Gatsby:

The 1920s: Nicknames• The Roaring ‘20s• The Jazz Age• The Flapper Era• The Aspirin Age• The Age of Wonderful Nonsense

Page 7: The Great Gatsby:

Fitzgerald’s View of the 1920’s

Page 8: The Great Gatsby:

1920’s ContextWWI made Americans question

traditional ideals.Literature and art denied foundations

of the past and went for the new.The philosophy of the Jazz Age was

called “modernism."

Page 9: The Great Gatsby:

Modernism• Modernism was an artistic trend that

sought to find new ways to communicate

• Writers stripped away descriptions of characters and setting and avoided direct statements of themes and resolutions

• This “fragmented” style of writing enabled the reader to choose meaning for himself, believing life had no meaning.

Page 10: The Great Gatsby:

Roaring Twenties

• Economy booming• America partied• Organized crime• Prohibition Act • Decline of moral standards

Page 11: The Great Gatsby:

OPTIMISM• business, change and innovation, laissez

faire- economy

• rapid growth of industry and mechanization: unlimited progress: electricity, automobile, telephone

• even skeptics believe in progress and in solving of problems: new" Golden Age" for America

Page 12: The Great Gatsby:

CRITICS• they called the decade "decline and

degradation"

• Americans are caught up in a "surge of materialism", people who had failed to grasp the meaning and significance of life.

• they feel disillusioned or disenchanted, they lost faith in life and in the possibility of social progress that caused their absolute lack of interest in politics.

Page 13: The Great Gatsby:

SOCIAL ATMOSPHERE OF CHANGE• relaxing of structures within the

sphere of private and public morality• relationship between the sexes• change of the status of women

Page 14: The Great Gatsby:

SPIRIT OF THE 1920’s

• urbanization and the move away from the land

• fascination with the dream of success• development of the cinema as a

medium of entertainment• popularity of jazz• increased mobility brought about by

the mass produced automobile

Page 16: The Great Gatsby:

PROHIBITION• the 18th Amendment(1919)prohibited the sale

and consumption of alcohol.• although alcohol was illegal it was distributed

through" bootleggers"• bootlegging means the production and sale of

liquor.• alcohol was served in illegal night-clubs which

were called a "speakeasy." • it was the time of famous gangsters like Al

Capone and events like the St. Valentine's Day massacre happened. During that time the Mafia became important in American society.

Page 18: The Great Gatsby:

Flapper Fashion • Flappers dressed in

shapeless dresses that came to the knee.

• Dresses were made to look “boy-like”

• Gender bending was common. Women would try to make themselves look more man-like.

Page 19: The Great Gatsby:

THE CHANGING ROLE OF WOMEN

• The 19th Amendment(1920) gave women the right to vote.

• during the Twenties 9 million women were employed and earned money on their own, many younger women used their money to enjoy themselves

• women bobbed their hair• they were able to drink and smoke in public. For

the first time female alcoholism is a major problem.

• the liberated young women were called" flappers" In The Great Gatsby Jordan Baker is such a new type of woman. She is living alone and has equal relationships to men. She is self-confident in dealing with others. Tom comments on her new freedom as a woman.

Page 20: The Great Gatsby:

FACTS ABOUT THE DECADE• 106,521,537 people in the United States • 2,132,000 unemployed, Unemployment

5.2% • Life expectancy: Male 53.6, Female 54.6

• 343.000 in military (down from 1,172,601

in 1919) • Average annual earnings $1236;

Teacher's salary $970 • Illiteracy rate reached a new low of 6% of

the population. • Gangland crime included murder,

swindles, racketeering • It took 13 days to reach California from

New York There were 387,000 miles of paved road.

Page 21: The Great Gatsby:

Historical Connections• F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote and set The Great Gatsby

in the United States in the 1920s. • The novel chronicles an era that Fitzgerald

himself dubbed the "Jazz Age." Following the shock and chaos of World War I, American society enjoyed unprecedented levels of prosperity during the "roaring" 1920s as the economy soared.

• At the same time, Prohibition, the ban on the sale and manufacture of alcohol made millionaires out of bootleggers and led to an increase in organized crime.

• Although Fitzgerald, like Nick Carraway in his novel, idolized the riches and glamor of the age, he was uncomfortable with the unrestrained materialism and the lack of morality that went with it.

Page 22: The Great Gatsby:

Conspicuous Consumption• This term was originally coined to

refer to the rise & power of extremely rich businessmen, who displayed their wealth in ostentatious houses & extravagant behaviour.

• This was invariably wasteful & implied increasing poverty among the lower classes in society.

Page 23: The Great Gatsby:

Who is F. Scott Fitzgerald?• Born in 1896, in St. Paul, Minnesota.• He attended Princeton University.• 1917 joined the army.• Met his wife Zelda.• Published The Great Gatsby at 23 in 1925.• Regarded as the speaker of the Jazz Age.• Drinking and wife’s schizophrenia • Died in 1940.

Page 24: The Great Gatsby:

Facts on F. Scott Fitzgerald• F. Scott Fitzgerald's full name was Francis Scott

Key Fitzgerald. He was named after his second cousin three times removed who was also the author of the United States' National Anthem

• The Great Gatsby was written in the summer of 1924 when Fitzgerald was in France

• His wife, Zelda Sayre was the daughter of an Alabama Supreme Court judge

• F. Scott Fitzgerald worked for a very short time on Gone with the Wind

• Fitzgerald's most famous work was The Great Gatsby even though he made most of his income from magazine articles and stories

Page 25: The Great Gatsby:

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Impact on Society• Fitzgerald named the 1920’s “The

Jazz Age”• Wrote screenplays for Metro-

Goldwyn-Mayer• Created the The Great Gatsby which

is said to be the most accurate description of the 1920’s

Page 26: The Great Gatsby:

Characters of The Great Gatsby• Jay Gatsby- The self-made wealthy

man who lives next door to Nick Carraway and loves Daisy Buchanan

Page 27: The Great Gatsby:

Characters of The Great Gatsby• Nick Carraway- the narrator, Daisy’s

cousin, Gatsby’s neighbor

Page 28: The Great Gatsby:

Characters in The Great Gatsby• Daisy Buchanan- married to Tom,

Gatsby’s love interest before the war, socialite

Page 29: The Great Gatsby:

Characters in The Great Gatsby• Tom Buchanan- Daisy’s husband, has

an affair with Myrtle• Myrtle Wilson- Tom’s woman in the

city, married to George• George Wilson- owns the gas station• Jordan Baker- Daisy’s friend,

professional golfer

Page 30: The Great Gatsby:

Old Money Vs. New Money• New Money:• Someone who has achieved the

American Dream• Not as respected in the 1920’s

• Old Money• Money from family wealth• Born rich• Not earned through work done by

yourself• Respected above all in the 1920’s

Page 31: The Great Gatsby:

Setting of The Great Gatsby• West Egg- where Nick

and Gatsby live, represents new money

East Egg- where Daisy lives, the more fashionable area, represents old money

Page 32: The Great Gatsby:

Settings in The Great Gatsby

• The City- New York City, where the characters escape to for work and play

• The Valley of Ashes- between the City and West Egg, where Wilson’s gas station is

Page 33: The Great Gatsby:

The Real Gold Coast

Page 34: The Great Gatsby:

Symbols in The Great Gatsby• Green Light- at the end of Daisy’s

dock and visible from Gatsby’s mansion. Represents Gatsby's hopes and dreams about Daisy.

Page 35: The Great Gatsby:

Symbols in The Great Gatsby

• The Valley of Ashes- the area between West Egg and New York City. It is a desolate area filled with industrial waste. .

It represents the social and moral decay of society during the 1920’s. It also shows the negative effects of greed

Page 36: The Great Gatsby:

Symbols in The Great Gatsby

• The Eyes of Dr. T. J. Ekleburg- A decaying billboard in the Valley of Ashes with eyes advertising an optometrist. There are multiple proposed meanings, including the representation of God’s moral judgment on society.

Page 37: The Great Gatsby:

WHAT IS THE AMERICAN DREAM?• It describes an attitude of hope and

faith that looks forward to the fulfillment of human wishes and desires.

“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

Page 40: The Great Gatsby:

SPIRITUAL AND MATERIAL IMPROVEMENT

• Materialism achieved too quickly.• Thus, lacking spiritual life/purpose.

• Gatsby is a character that represents this DREAM.

Page 41: The Great Gatsby:

FAILURE OF THE AMERICAN DREAM• Poverty- the state of one who lacks a certain

amount of material possessions or money.• Discrimination-the prejudicial treatment of an

individual based on their actual or perceived membership in a certain group or category

• Exploitation-treating someone unfairly in order to benefit from their work.

• Hypocrisy-practice of claiming to have moral standards or beliefs to which one's own behavior does not conform

• Corruption- dishonest or fraudulent conduct by those in power

• Suppression- forceful prevention; putting down by power or authority

Page 42: The Great Gatsby:

How is this developed?• Through the 5 central characters• Through certain dominant images

and symbols• Through diction.

Page 43: The Great Gatsby:

Pre-reading:       1.Why are we still reading a book written in the

1920’s? What gives a book its longevity?

2.How was the 1920’s a reaction to WWI?

3.Some people think that having money leads to happiness. Do you agree? Why or why not? What are the advantages or disadvantages of being wealthy.

4.What is the "American Dream"? Where did it originate, and how has it changed over the centuries?

5.Have you ever wanted to relive a moment from your past, to redo it? Describe the situation. How and why would you change the past?