the great gatsby by f. scott fitzgerald

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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Born: Sept 24, 1896 Named after ancestor (Francis Scott Key) 1913 - enrolled in Princeton University (didn’t graduate) 1917 – enlisted in army Fell in love with Zelda Sayre - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Great Gatsbyby

F. Scott Fitzgerald

Page 2: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

Write the notes on the slides with a pencil in the top right corner - - - -

Page 3: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald

Born: Sept 24, 1896 Named after ancestor (Francis

Scott Key) 1913 - enrolled in Princeton

University (didn’t graduate) 1917 – enlisted in army Fell in love with Zelda Sayre She agreed to marry him once he

was a success 1920 – his book This Side of

Paradise is published

Page 4: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald (cont.)

The book is successful; Zelda agrees to marry him

Daughter – Frances 1925 – The Great Gatsby Parties and alcoholism Zelda’s breakdown and

death Died: 1940 (heart attack)

Page 5: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

Great Gatsby Setting

Time period – 1920’s Location – East Egg, West Egg, NYC

Page 6: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

Prohibition The Eighteenth

Amendment (1919) to the Constitution forbade the manufacture, sale, import, or export of intoxicating liquors.

The Twenty-first Amendment (1933) repealed the Eighteenth Amendment.

ALCOHOL

Page 7: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

The Roaring Twenties

• Prohibition• Speakeasies• Bootlegging• Organized Crime• Jazz Age• Dancing• Flappers• Women’s rights

Page 8: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1920

More people in the city than in the country

# of radios in homes – 2,000 Harlem Renaissance begins League of Nations established 19th Amendment – women granted

the right to vote in the US

Page 9: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1921

Warren G. Harding is inaugurated as President of the United States of America

Knee length skirts become fashionable

The first Miss America pageant First drive-in food place

Page 10: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1922 Flapper dress makes its debut Speakeasies in NYC = 5,000

Page 11: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1923 Hollywood sign goes up Americans see on avg. 1 movie/week Charleston dance becomes popular President Harding dies Vice President Coolidge becomes President 15 million cars registered in the US

Page 12: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1924 # of radios in US homes –

2.5 million 1st Macy’s Thanksgiving Day

Parade

Page 13: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1925

Fitzgerald publishes The Great Gatsby Hitler publishes Mein Kampf The first woman Governor of a U.S.

state (Wyoming) is elected. The Scopes Trial

Evolution in schools debate First trial broadcast over the radio

Frisbie invented

Page 14: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1926

40 hour work week (used to be 84 hour) 1 in 6 Americans owns a car 1st supermarket Mae West – arrested for moving navel

during play US woman swims the English Channel Deaths due to bad booze in NYC =

750

Page 15: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1927

Charles Lindbergh flies solo across the Atlantic Ocean

First talking movie (The Jazz Singer) Telephone service is opened between

New York City and London (AT&T) Speakeasies in NYC = 30,000 Deaths due to bad booze in 1 hospital

in NYC on New Year’s Eve = 41

Page 16: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1927 (continued) Al “Scarface”

Capone earnings $100 million –

alcohol sales $30 million –

protection business $25 million –

gambling $10 million – vice

and sundry rackets

Page 17: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1928 U.S. signs Briand-Kellogg Pact - outlawing

war Amelia Earhart flies across the Atlantic Women compete for the first time in

Olympic field events Penicillin discovered 1st televisions are sold - $75 Mickey Mouse in first cartoon Divorce rate – 1 in 6 marriages

Page 18: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

1929 Empire State Building

construction begins Speakeasies in NYC = 32,000 –

100,000 Speakeasies in Chicago = 10,000 Valentine’s Day Massacre

“Bugs” Moran gang killed by Al Capone’s men

Car radio invented Stock Market crash

October 29 “Black Tuesday” $9 billion lost on that one day

Page 19: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

Assignment

What would the US be without the following 1920’s events/inventions?

Pick one from the following list and write 50 words in your journal explaining your opinion. Radio Car radio Television Miss America Pageant Prohibition Fast food places 40 hour work week Skyscrapers Penicillin

Page 20: The Great Gatsby by  F. Scott Fitzgerald

Bibliography http://www.princeton.edu/pr/pictures/a-f/fitzgerald-f-scott/fitzgerald-med.jpg http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.shortstory.by.ru/fitzgerald http://library.thinkquest.org/C005846/introduction/introduction.htm http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/adaccess/timeline-1926.html http://www.defenselink.mil/photos/Feb2003/030114-O-0000D-001.html http://disney.go.com/disneyvideos/animatedfilms/incredibles/ www.theconnection.org/.../ 04/20040402_b_main.asp http://www.apple.com/ipod/ http://www.cadillac.com/cadillacjsp/models/gallery.jsp?model=escalade www.allsports.com/ mlb/yankees/frommer42.htm http://www.signonsandiego.com/sports/baseball/20050323-9999-1s23bonds.html