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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby

F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby. “How to be a Millionaire or Just Look Like One: Jay Gatsby: The Artful Poseur”. Importance of Setting in The Great Gatsby.

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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby

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  1. F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby “How to be a Millionaire or Just Look Like One: Jay Gatsby: The Artful Poseur”

  2. Importance of Setting in The Great Gatsby • 1922: The 1920s represented an era of rapid change. WWI had ended, America was victorious, and the economy shifted to prosperity (largely due to mass production of exportable goods and the creation of a “consumer culture.”

  3. Defiance of the Prohibition Act, women gaining the right to vote, relaxing of social mores, the rise in organized crime, the influence of Hollywood, advertising, and the fashion industries, all contributed to the advent of the Roaring 20s—a time of reckless spending, get-rich-quick schemes and an abandonment of the noble ideals of hard and honest work.

  4. East Egg (where the old money families live) and West Egg, Long Island (where the nouveau riche [newly rich] reside. • The Valley of Ashes (Industrial section): the depression and grime symbolize the wealthy’s exploitation of the working class. Myrtle Wilson feels trapped in the “ash heap.”

  5. Settings: reflect social class Note, for example, the contrasts between the interiors of: Gatsby’s and the Buchanans’ houses, Tom and Myrtle’s apartment in New York City or the Plaza Hotel, and George and Myrtle Wilson’s garage/apartment.

  6. Political/Social Climate in 1920s • President Woodrow Wilson had led the country through WWI. • Warren Harding (Republican) was elected President in 1921. His administration is remembered for its CORRUPTION. • The government and law enforcement did little to stop the illegal sale of alcohol.

  7. The nouveau riche (new rich) emerged: a generation of wealthy individuals who did not inherit their social and financial status, but who became suddenly well-off due to lucrative business ventures (some were illegal). “The American Dream” was attainable without “hard work” or “perseverance.”

  8. Warren Harding

  9. President Warren G. Harding (1922-1923)Though he promised a “return to normalcy” after the war, Harding accomplished little as president. Some political analysts believe he was elected because of his distinct charm and strong, masculine good looks rather than his political intelligence.

  10. During 1922 he unknowingly contributed to an elaborate oil scam known as the Teapot Dome Scandal, where members of his own cabinet were using the rights to public oil reserves for personal gain. He died of a heart attack in 1923, leaving behind one of the most corrupt administrations to ever occupy the White House.

  11. 18th Amendment Fails • 18th Amendment: prohibiting the sale, manufacturing, or transporting of alcohol, went into effect January 16, 1920. The intent of the Amendment was to help the working man rise up from the poverty his drinking habits had created. Instead, alcohol sales sky-rocked.

  12. Prohibition Creates Bootlegging Industry • Crime increased because people rebelled against laws prohibiting alcohol. ● Numerous “speak- easies”—nightclubs where alcoholic drinks were sold—cropped up.

  13. Gangsters Gangsters profited during this decade by smuggling alcohol and distributing it to different illegal businesses. Al Capone from Chicago was one of these gangsters. He made $105 million a year smuggling alcohol. Political and law enforcement corruption contributed to the rise in crime.

  14. What do Al Capone, Coco Chanel, and Greta Garbo have in common with Jay Gatsby ? • They all reinvented themselves in the 1920s.

  15. “Al Capone is America's best known gangster and the single greatest symbol of the collapse of law and order in the United States during the 1920s Prohibition era. Capone had a leading role in the illegal activities that lent Chicago its reputation as a lawless city.” (Chicago Historical Society Home Page).

  16. From Alphonso the pin boy to Al the king pin ■ Born 1899 in Brooklyn, NY and grew up in a rough neighborhood. ■Dropped out of school in the 6th grade at the age of 14. ■ Joined 2 gangs as a teenager. ■ Held various menial jobs: pin boy in bowling alley; clerk in candy store, etc. ■ Got involved in Five Points Gang (Manhattan) (Chicago Historical Society Home Page).

  17. Frankie Yale, the boss of the Five Points Gang, sent Capone to Chicago after Capone caused serious injury to a rival gang member. • John Torrio, Yale’s old mentor, saw great potential in Capone because of his physical strength and intelligence (and because Capone was capable of killing gang rivals) (Chicago Historical Society Home Page).

  18. Soon Capone was running Torrio’s bootlegging business, brothers and saloons. • When Torrio was shot and wounded by a rival gang member, he left town. Capone took over as “Boss” (Chicago Historical Society Home Page).

  19. Other Social/Political Factors of the 1920s:

  20. ♀19th Amendment • August 26, 1920, the 19th Amendment passed. • Now women had the legal right to vote. • Although women did not flock to the polls to vote after the 19th Amendment, this landmark legislation does reflect the 1920s image-conscious “independent woman.” (Women still gained status via a “good marriage).

  21. Consumerism Rises • The prosperity of the post-WWI era is attributed to the “Culture of Consumerism” fueled by advertising in mass circulation of magazines such as Ladies Home Journal and The Saturday Evening Post. Hollywood experienced a boom. Tabloids flourished (b/c we wanted to read about the rich and famous).

  22. The Fashion Industry also Flourished

  23. How important is fashion to Jay Gatsby? • At 17, when Jimmy Gatz decides he is really Jay Gatsby, his mentor, Dan Cody, takes him to Duluth and “[buys] him a blue coat, six pairs of white duck trousers, and a yachting cap” to sharpen Gatsby’s image (100).

  24. Gatsby’s clothes are mentioned several times in the novel. • There’s a “caramel-colored suit” (64) • He shows Nick a picture of himself and other young men in “blazers” at Oxford (67). • He wears a “white flannel suit, silver shirt, and gold-colored tie” when he meets

  25. Gatsby’s suits are mentioned several times in the novel. • There’s a “caramel-colored suit” (64) • He shows Nick a picture of himself and other young men in “blazers” at Oxford (67). • He wears a “white flannel suit, silver shirt, and gold-colored tie” when he meets Daisy at Nick’s house (84).

  26. His multiple shirts move Daisy to tears. • When he gives Daisy a tour of his house, Gatsby shows her his wardrobe: • “…he opened …two hulking patent cabinets which held his massed suits and dressing gowns and ties, and his shirts, piled like bricks in stacks a dozen high” (92). He took out a pile of shirts…shirts of sheer linen and thick silk and fine flannel…”

  27. Daisy comments to Gatsby: “You resemble the advertisement of the man” (119). • Tom makes fun of Gatsby’s “pink suit” (122)

  28. "How many cares one loses when one decides not to be something, but to become someone." --Gabrielle "Coco" Chanel

  29. Designer Coco Chanel was born Gabrielle Bonheur Chanel in 1883, although she would later claim that her real date of birth was 1893, making her ten years younger. • Her mother died when Coco was 6 years old. She spent most of her childhood in the orphanage of the Catholic monastery of Aubazine. There she learned the trade of sewing. During WWI, Coco moved to the resort town of Deauvile, where she met and became mistress of an English military officer, and then of a wealthy industrialist.

  30. From Gabrielle to Coco • “Through the patronage and connections that these men provided she was able to open her own millinery shop in Paris in 1910 and she soon had boutiques in both Deauville and Biarritz.” • During WWII, Chanel was a nurse, but her affair with a Nazi officer had a negative impact on her popularity. She moved to Switzerland to avoid the scandal.

  31. Coco Chanel’s fashions (the “little black dress” and pill box suit) lost popularity in Europe, but gained status and desirability in the United States, where movie stars such as Grace Kelly and Audrey Hepburn made famous her boxy cardigan suits and elegant but simple dress styles.

  32. Revising the Past • “Later when questioned [about her background], Chanel would claim that when her mother died, her father sailed for America and she was sent to live with two cold-hearted spinster aunts. She even claimed to have been born in 1893 as opposed to 1883, and that her mother had died when Coco was twelve instead of six. All this was done to diminish the stigma that poverty, orphanhood, and illegitimacy bestowed upon unfortunates in nineteenth-century France” (Coco Chanel Biography).

  33. GabrielleCoco

  34. Hollywood also Thrived • By 1920, there were more than 20,000 movie houses operating in the US. • “The basic patterns and foundations of the film industry (and its economic organization) were established in the 1920s” (Dirks).

  35. Hollywood, cont. • “The studio system was essentially born with long-term contracts for stars, lavish production values, and increasingly rigid control of directors and stars by the studio's production chief and in-house publicity departments” (Dirks).

  36. “After World War I and into the early 1920s, America was the leading producer of films in the world - using Thomas Ince's "factory system" of production, although the system did limit the creativity of many directors”(Dirks).

  37. Production was in the hands of the major studios (that really flourished after 1927 for almost 20 years), and the star system was burgeoning.

  38. Jay Gatsby Hobnobs with Stars • Chapter 4 mentions among Gatsby’s party guest list: Newton Orchid who controlled Films Par Excellence and Eckhaust and Clyde Cohen and Don S. Schwartze, and Arthur McCarty, all connected with the movies… (these are fictitious names). [62].

  39. Hollywood, where images are created, actors change their names to something the public will like, where fortunes can be lost and made quickly, and where scandals abound, has made ILLUSION one of the most lucrative businesses in this country.

  40. A Star is Born: Greta Garbo, 1925

  41. Reinventing the Self • Garbo: born Greta Louisa Gustafsson in Stockholm, Sweden on September 18, 1905. Her father died when she was 14. • Worked as a “lather girl” in a barber shop, then as a salesgirl and occasional model in a department store. Met Mauritz Stiller, Sweden’s foremost film director.

  42. From Gustafsson to Garbo • 1925 Stiller went to Hollywood to work for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. Stiller took Garbo with him and she got an acting contract with M-G-M. Her first films in America—The Torrent (1926) and Flesh and the Devil (1927)-- silent films, made her a success.

  43. Garbo withdraws from Hollywood • After her 1941 film, Two Faced Woman, flopped, she retreated from Hollywood at the age of 36 and led a private, somewhat secluded life in New York City.

  44. From Jimmy Gatz to Jay Gatsby • What motivates Gatz’s transformation? • When did it begin? • How does Gatsby become wealthy? • Does Gatsby represent the American Dream or a Corruption of that Dream?

  45. James Gatz’s parents were “shiftless and unsuccessful farm people” from North Dakota (98).

  46. At a young age, James puts himself on a rigorous self-improvement plan, trying to follow Hopalong Cassidy’s advice.

  47. Hopalong Cassidy American Icon: Henry Gatz tells Nick that “Jimmy” had a copy of the book, Hopalong Cassidy, when he was a boy. On the back fly-leaf “Jimmy” printed his “self-improvement” schedule (173).

  48. Hopalong’s Creed The highest badge of honor a person can wear is honesty. Be truthful at all times. Your parents are the best friends you have. Listen to them and obey their instructions. If you want to be respected, you must respect others. Show good manners in every way. Only through hard work and study can you succeed. Don't be lazy.

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