1 / 24

Gatsby Update & Chapter 5

Gatsby Update & Chapter 5. Summary of Events. Nick introduces reader to the world of excess that is the 1920s Image of Gatsby staring off across the bay at the green light on a dock Green Light = hope, youth, forward momentum, money Gatsby’s parties are a who’s who of NY society

yitta
Télécharger la présentation

Gatsby Update & Chapter 5

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gatsby Update & Chapter 5

  2. Summary of Events • Nick introduces reader to the world of excess that is the 1920s • Image of Gatsby staring off across the bay at the green light on a dock • Green Light = hope, youth, forward momentum, money • Gatsby’s parties are a who’s who of NY society • Gatsby & Nick have lunch with Wolfsheim • Another indication that Gatsby is dealing in something illegal

  3. Summary of Events • Gatsby shares his background with Nick but it seems contrived until he shows “memorabilia” of the events • Jordan tells the story of Gatsby and Daisy • Gatsby & Daisy in love • Gatsby no money • Daisy marries Tom b/c money • Jordan asks Nick to invite Daisy to tea (Gatsby’s request)

  4. Important Events in Chapter 5 • Nick invites Daisy to tea • Gatsby shows up an hour early (he’s way vulnerable) • Gatsby has been waiting, dreaming, hoping for this moment for 5 years • Once Daisy arrives, she and Gatsby and Nick stand in the living room • Gatsby leans against the mantle & almost knocks down a BROKEN clock

  5. Important Events in chapter 5 • Significance of BROKEN clock • Clock is stopped at a point of time, trapped forever • In a way, so is Gatsby’s life stopped at the point in time when he realized he could not have Daisy b/c he was poor • He is also trapped by his dreams of ideal love with Daisy • Might also indicate that emotionally Gatsby has stopped growing because he is chasing a dream rather than living (frozen in time)

  6. Important Events in Chapter 5 • Gatsby & Daisy’s emotional states change as they become more comfortable with each other • There is a “new well-being” radiating from Gatsby & Daisy • Gatsby wants to impress Daisy w/his house (he does & re-values all material possessions in the eyes of Daisy) • Significance of shirt throwing: to show how much he has amassed. Daisy cries b/c she is so overwhelmed by his material possessions & she loves material things

  7. The Green Light • Gatsby points out the green light @the end of Daisy’s dock • Each day he looks at the light (a ritual) now the light no longer holds the significance b/c his love is standing beside him. • Gatsby’s goal (his entire adult life basically) must change

  8. The End (chapter 5) • Nick offers this reasoning at the end of the chapter: • Gatsby may be dissatisfied with how his dream has turned out • Has Gatsby been in love with Daisy for 5 years or just the idea of Daisy (how he imagines her to be)?

  9. Analysis Chapter 6 • Cloud of mystery surrounding Gatsby cleared away • James Gatz = Jay Gatsby (fiction) • North Dakota raised - never really accepted his Midwestern upbringing • Gatsby’s story is rags-to-riches • Man from middle of nowhere makes it big through ingenuity & resourcefulness • Money large part of American Dream • Money is not enough - clear when looked @through Gatsby’s experience

  10. More Chapter 6 • Distinction btwn “new” and “old” money • Regardless of how much $ you have, where it comes from & how long you have had it are what counts • Tom & Co. show up @Gatsby’s house - shows how shallow and mean-spirited “old” $ can be • Gatsby will forever remain outside the circle of “old” $ - they will never accept him • Dreams are good but not when they consume the dreamer (Gatsby stopped growing the day “James Gatz” ceased to exist.)

  11. Still More Chapter 6 • Daisy & Tom come to a Gatsby party • Gatsby worries that Daisy did not have fun • In his dream she would have had a good time • Gatsby is like a knight searching for the grail • He must continually return to the past to revise and modify his dream. • Sadly it will never be realized

  12. Analysis Chapter 7 • Weather becomes oppressively hot (do not overlook this) • Gatsby & Tom go head-to-head • To Tom, Gatsby is common and his existence meaningless • Gatsby, in all his years of dreaming, never thought he wouldn’t get his way - when this happens he doesn’t know what to do & is exposed

  13. More Chapter 7 • Meet the real Daisy • Relatively few lines • What lies underneath the surface isn’t good • She has an affair w/Gatsby to get back at her husband - she’s playing a game

  14. The “Death” Car • Daisy is exposed • Her recklessness results in Myrtle’s brutal death • The reader has a sense that Daisy has run over Myrtle on purpose • Gatsby’s car symbolizes the clear and obvious manifestation (sign) of American materialism

  15. Myrtle’s Death • Myrtle’s death is tragic but… • Materialism brought about her demise • She wants all the material comforts $ can provide (isn’t this why she fell for Tom in his nice suit) • In effect, she has been killed by her desires • Materialism can only bring misery

  16. Nick - Chapter 7 • Realizes it’s his 30th birthday (passage from youthful idealism to reality) • He sees clearly what Tom, Daisy and Jordan are about • Grows up enough to take a moral stand (no longer reserves judgment)

  17. Final Image - Chapter 7 • Gatsby stays @Daisy’s house to keep watch • The dream continues… • Funny, Daisy could care less about Gatsby’s feelings • So Gatsby holds on to the last vestiges of his dream by standing watch • Tom might be sad about Myrtle but she’s expendable just like everyone who isn’t of his social class

  18. Analysis Chapter 8 • Nick is unable to sleep (premonition of bad things to come) • Gatsby becomes weaker, more helpless • Refuses to acknowledge that the illusion of his dream has vanished • Gatsby (as a young man) tried to become worthy of Daisy but cannot realize that his drive to succeed is worth ten times Daisy

  19. More Chapter 8 • Gatsby loved Daisy, Daisy loved Gatsby • They each love the illusion they present to the other • If they are together they run the risk of exposing the real “selves” to each other • Daisy leaves Gatsby because she wants whatever is easiest to determine the direction of her life.

  20. Still More Chapter 8 • Gatsby is a dreamer, has passion, genuinely cares for something even if it is a dream - more than can be said for the Buchannans or Jordan • Nick can’t stand to be with Jordan - he is irritated by her shallowness - he is growing seeing what society is really made of and having the courage to stand against it.

  21. And Finally… • Wilson cannot be consoled - he is in effect a wasteland, void of spirituality, void of life - he believes the eyes of T.J. Eckleburg are the eyes of God & God sees everything • Overcome w/grief Wilson kills Gatsby thinking he is the one who killed Myrtle

  22. Final Image - Chapter 8 • Gatsby’s Death in the Pool • His death is a rebirth (removes him from mortal life and allows him to go to a better place) • Gatsby remains the dreamer - his dream is completely dead • By doing nothing to protect himself, Gatsby dies in Daisy stead (chivalry at its finest)

  23. Chapter 9 Analysis • Reader comes face-to-face w/ugly side of the American Dream • Gatsby’s Funeral is Center Stage • No one is interested in planning Gatsby’s funeral so Nick makes the arrangements • Gatsby’s father shows up to fill in the rest of Gatsby’s story

  24. More Chapter 9 • Nick heads back to the Midwest where morality and kindness still exist • Nick learns that Tom sent Wilson to Gatsby’s house and feels “entirely justified” in doing so • Tom & Daisy are careless people - in essence like children • Green light - hopes and dreams of society • Gatsby lives on despite his death • Is there futility in chasing dreams? • “boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past”

More Related