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ReaderResources GreatGatsby

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Topics covered

  • nostalgia,
  • mystery,
  • friendship,
  • poetic language,
  • Prohibition,
  • tragedy,
  • wealth and morality,
  • The Great Gatsby,
  • Jay Gatsby,
  • Myrtle Wilson
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
272 views11 pages

ReaderResources GreatGatsby

Uploaded by

Ashton Havens
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Topics covered

  • nostalgia,
  • mystery,
  • friendship,
  • poetic language,
  • Prohibition,
  • tragedy,
  • wealth and morality,
  • The Great Gatsby,
  • Jay Gatsby,
  • Myrtle Wilson

The Great Gatsby

by F. Scott Fitzgerald

1
Table of Contents

The Great
Gatsby

About the Book.................................................... 3


About the Author ................................................. 4
Historical and Literary Context .............................. 5
Other Works/Adaptations ..................................... 6 “Show me a hero and
Discussion Questions............................................ 9 I will write you a
tragedy.”
Additional Resources .......................................... 10
Credits .............................................................. 11

Preface
The Great Gatsby may be the most popular classic in
modern American fiction. Since its publication in 1925,
Fitzgerald's masterpiece has become a touchstone for
generations of readers and writers, many of whom reread it
every few years as a ritual of imaginative renewal. The story
of Jay Gatsby's desperate quest to win back his first love
reverberates with themes at once characteristically American
and universally human, among them the importance of What is the NEA Big Read?
honesty, the temptations of wealth, and the struggle to
escape the past. Though The Great Gatsby runs to fewer A program of the National Endowment for the Arts, NEA Big
than two hundred pages, there is no bigger read in American Read broadens our understanding of our world, our
literature. communities, and ourselves through the joy of sharing a
good book. Managed by Arts Midwest, this initiative offers
grants to support innovative community reading programs
designed around a single book.
A great book combines enrichment with enchantment. It
awakens our imagination and enlarges our humanity. It can
offer harrowing insights that somehow console and comfort
us. Whether you’re a regular reader already or making up
for lost time, thank you for joining the NEA Big Read.

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2
About the Book
Introduction to decency and self-indulgence. In the novel's conclusion, the
characters collide, leaving human wreckage in their wake.
the Book
F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel
The Great Gatsby is a tragic Major Characters in the Book
love story, a mystery, and a
Nick Carraway
social commentary on
Nick, a young Midwesterner educated at Yale, is the novel's
American life. Although it was
narrator. When he moves to the West Egg area of Long
not a commercial success for
Island, he joins the lavish social world of Tom, Jordan,
Fitzgerald during his lifetime,
Gatsby, and his cousin Daisy.
this lyrical novel has become
an acclaimed masterpiece read Jay Gatsby
and taught throughout the The handsome, mysterious Gatsby, who lives in a mansion
world. next door to Nick's cottage, is known for his lavish parties.
Nick, whom he trusts, gradually learns about Gatsby's past
Unfolding in nine concise
and his love for Daisy.
chapters, The Great Gatsby concerns the wasteful lives of
four wealthy characters as observed by their acquaintance, Daisy Buchanan
narrator Nick Carraway. Like Fitzgerald himself, Nick is from Beautiful, charming, and spoiled, Daisy is the object of
Minnesota, attended an Ivy League university, served in the Gatsby's love. Her caprice and materialism lead her to marry
U.S. Army during World War I, moved to New York after the Tom Buchanan.
war, and questions—even while participating in—high
Tom Buchanan
society.
From an enormously wealthy Chicago family, Tom is a
Having left the Midwest to work in the bond business in the former Yale football star who sees himself at the top of an
summer of 1922, Nick settles in West Egg, Long Island, exclusive social hierarchy. He is conceited, violent, racist,
among the nouveau riche epitomized by his next-door and unfaithful.
neighbor Jay Gatsby. A mysterious man of thirty, Gatsby is
Jordan Baker
the subject of endless fascination to the guests at his lavish
Daisy's friend Jordan epitomizes the modern woman of the
all-night parties. He is rumored to be a hero of the Great
1920s. A liberated, competitive golfer, she is firmly
War. Others say he served as a German spy. Gatsby claims
established in high society. She both attracts and repels Nick
to have attended Oxford University, but the evidence is
as a romantic interest.
suspect. As Nick learns more about Gatsby, every detail
about him seems questionable, except his love for the George Wilson
charming Daisy Buchanan. The owner of an auto garage at the edge of the valley of
ashes, George finds his only happiness through his faithless
Jay Gatsby's decadent parties are thrown with one goal: to
wife, Myrtle.
attract Daisy, who lives across the bay in the more
fashionable East Egg. From the lawn of his sprawling Myrtle Wilson
mansion, Gatsby can see the green light glowing on her Myrtle dreams of belonging to a higher social class than
dock, which becomes a symbol in the novel of an George can offer. Vivacious and sensual, she hopes her
unreachable treasure, the "future that year by year recedes adulterous affair will lead to a life of glamour.
before us."
Though Daisy is a married socialite and a mother, Gatsby
still worships her as his "golden girl." They first met when
she was a young lady from an affluent family and he was a
working-class military officer. Daisy pledged to wait for his
return from the war. Instead she married Tom Buchanan, a
wealthy classmate of Nick's. Having obtained a great
fortune, Gatsby sets out to win her back again.
A profound indictment of class privilege in the Jazz Age and
beyond, The Great Gatsby explores the conflict between

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3
About the Author
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Way Down
1896–1940: Fitzgerald would not publish another novel for nine years. In
Between Laurels 1932, Zelda suffered a breakdown from which she never
fully recovered. She spent most of her remaining days in
September 24, 1896: Into a mental institutions. Fitzgerald sold stories to The Saturday
family that traces its ancestry Evening Post and Esquire to keep financially afloat. Implicitly
to the author of "The Star acknowledging his wife's mental illness and his own
Spangled Banner," Francis alcoholism, he drew on their life abroad in the novel Tender
Scott Key Fitzgerald is born in Is the Night (1934). Fitzgerald relocated to Hollywood in
his parents' house on Laurel 1937 to write screenplays. His sole screen credit from this
Avenue in St. Paul, Minnesota. period is for the film Three Comrades (1938). It joins his
other script credit, Pusher-in-the-Face (1929), from an
The Way Up earlier California stint. Eventually Fitzgerald began sustained
work on his novel The Last Tycoon (1941). Tragically, his
Although Fitzgerald's father
end came before the book's did. Several chapters shy of
went bankrupt, Fitzgerald still F. Scott Fitzgerald, c. 1925
finishing, Fitzgerald died of a heart attack in the apartment
played with the rich kids in (American Stock/Getty
of his Hollywood companion, columnist Sheilah Graham,
town. This paradox would later Images)
while eating a chocolate bar and listening to Beethoven's
inform his fiction. His awareness of his situation sharpened
Eroica symphony.
during his years at Princeton, where he studied from 1913 to
1917 until he accepted a commission from the U.S. Army. He December 21, 1940: Fitzgerald dies of a heart attack. His
never saw combat. During World War I, Fitzgerald was final address: 1403 N. Laurel Avenue, Los Angeles,
stationed near Montgomery, Alabama, where he began California.
revising what became his first novel, This Side of Paradise
(1920). There he also met the love of his life, Zelda Sayre,
the charming, mercurial daughter of a judge. Fitzgerald's
early literary successes soon made him and Zelda celebrities
of the Jazz Age—a term he coined. During the 1920s, Zelda
served as his editor, confidante, and rival. Their appetite for
excess made them notorious in an age when excess was the
norm. The Fitzgeralds moved to France in 1924 with their
young daughter, Frances (nicknamed Scottie), where they
fell among a group of American expatriate artists whom the
writer Gertrude Stein christened the Lost Generation. In
1925 publisher Charles Scribner's Sons came out with
Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, which has become his most
enduring work.

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Historical and Literary Context
The Roaring Twenties
1920 1925

 The 18th Amendment, establishing Prohibition,  Charles Scribner's Sons publishes The Great Gatsby.
becomes law.  First issue of the New Yorker goes to press.
 The 19th Amendment passes, giving 26 million  After John Scopes is charged with teaching from
women the right to vote. Darwin's Origin of Species, Clarence Darrow takes his
 Warren G. Harding is elected president. case.

1921 1926

 Charlie Chaplin stars in The Kid.  The value of bootlegging in the U.S. estimated at $3.6
billion.
 Coco Chanel introduces Chanel No. 5.
 Benny Goodman records his first solo, "He's the Last
 Rorschach inkblot tests first used. Word," with the Ben Pollack Band.
 "Shoeless" Joe Jackson and others banned from  Henry Ford institutes the 5-day workweek and 8-hour
baseball in wake of the "Black Sox" scandal. workday.

1922 1927

 James Joyce's Ulysses published.  The Jazz Singer opens as the first talking motion
 T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land published. picture.

 First issue of Reader's Digest published.  Charles Lindbergh lands his Spirit of St. Louis in Paris
after the first transatlantic flight.
 Louis Armstrong leaves New Orleans for Chicago to
play with King Oliver.  Ford introduces the Model A.

 Dance marathon craze begins.  Duke Ellington opens a four-year residency at the
Cotton Club in New York City.
1923
1928
 First transcontinental nonstop flight takes off from
New York and lands in San Diego.  Walt Disney makes his first Mickey Mouse silent short,
Plane Crazy, and succeeds with his second one,
 Jelly Roll Morton makes his first Paramount recordings Steamboat Willie, which was synchronized with sound.
in Chicago.
 Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to make a
 President Harding dies; Calvin Coolidge takes oath of transatlantic flight.
office.
 Herbert Hoover is elected president.
1924
1929
 George Gershwin premieres Rhapsody in Blue.
 March 26: The New York Stock Exchange hits a record
 J. Edgar Hoover appointed director of the Bureau of high, with 8.2 million shares traded.
Investigation, later named the FBI.
 The Gerber Co. invents canned baby food.
 The ten-millionth Model T rolls off the Ford assembly
line.  Ernest Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms is published.

 Colleen Moore plays the title role in the film The  October 29: On Black Tuesday, the stock market
Perfect Flapper. crashes.

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Other Works/Adaptations
Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age Fitzgerald and His Other Works
Most young American veterans of the First World War came Zelda Sayre refused to marry Fitzgerald unless he could
home changed by two revelations. One was the horror of provide for her. Following his honorable discharge from the
trench warfare; the other was their exposure to life in Army in 1919, he moved to New York alone to revise his
London and Paris, where artists and writers celebrated sheer manuscript of This Side of Paradise. Twice rejected by the
survival with decadent verve. publisher Charles Scribner's Sons, the novel amounted to a
thinly veiled autobiography of Fitzgerald's Princeton years.
Raised by Puritan-minded parents to succeed first at Ivy
When Scribner finally published This Side of Paradise in
League universities and then in business, masses of young
1920, Fitzgerald won not only literary fame and temporary
men and their wives-to-be returned at least mildly shell-
financial security, but also the hand of his beloved Zelda.
shocked by their conflicting experiences.
This initial success established a pattern: After every novel,
Despite serving stateside during the war, F. Scott Fitzgerald
Scribner published a collection of new Fitzgerald short
nevertheless wrote of this disenchantment and its
stories. During his lifetime, Fitzgerald was best known as the
consequences in his greatest works. The nihilism of this Lost
author of more than 150 stories, originally published in such
Generation is evident from This Side of Paradise's concluding
magazines as The Saturday Evening Post, McCall's, Redbook,
page, when Fitzgerald said they had "grown up to find all
and Esquire. The collections—Flappers and Philosophers
Gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken."
(1920), Tales of the Jazz Age (1922), All the Sad Young Men
Americans had two strong and opposite reactions to this (1926), and Taps at Reveille (1935)—include such frequently
state of affairs: The older generation pushed for new laws to anthologized pieces as "The Diamond as Big as the Ritz,"
control social outbursts, and the new generation rejected "Babylon Revisited," and "Bernice Bobs Her Hair."
those laws, especially the Eighteenth Amendment, which
In his lifetime, Fitzgerald earned more money from his
forbade the manufacture and sale of alcohol. Many
stories than from all his novels combined. His first Post story
Americans turned to bootleggers, who illegally either served
in 1920 sold for $400; by 1928, some were bringing in
alcohol smuggled from abroad or distilled their own. In The
$3,500 apiece.
Great Gatsby, the title character's party guests often
attribute his extraordinary wealth to bootlegging and other These stories provided a way for Fitzgerald to test themes
illicit activities. and situations that he would later develop in his novels. For
example, literary critics identify four stories from All the Sad
Introducing the seventieth anniversary edition of The Great
Young Men—"Absolution," "Winter Dreams," "The Sensible
Gatsby, Fitzgerald scholar Matthew J. Bruccoli wrote that the
Thing," and "The Rich Boy"—as the "Gatsby-cluster," since
Great War "triggered disillusionment, moral reevaluation,
he stripped and reused passages from them for his 1925
social experimentation, and hedonism.... Although Fitzgerald
masterpiece.
joined the parties and chronicled them, he wrote in
judgment." High living in Europe and low sales for Gatsby silenced
Fitzgerald as a novelist for nine years, until he published
Not only was he the most famous writer of the 1920s,
Tender Is the Night in 1934. The novel records the marriage
Fitzgerald also coined the term Jazz Age, which denoted an
of psychologist Dick Diver and his patient Nicole Warren. As
era of ragtime, jazz, stylish automobiles, and uninhibited
with the emotionally ravaged Anthony and Gloria Patch from
young women with bobbed hair and short skirts.
his 1922 novel The Beautiful and The Damned, readers often
Often called the Roaring Twenties, the postwar decade interpret Dick and Nicole as alter egos for their author and
sometimes appears as one long flamboyant party, where the his wife.
urban rich danced the Charleston and the foxtrot until 2 a.m.
Fitzgerald's final works deal comically and tragically with
In fact, one might just as convincingly describe it as a period
Hollywood. His college friend and literary editor, Edmund
of individual possibility and lofty aspirations to serve the
Wilson, edited his unfinished novel The Last Tycoon for
greater good. In his 1931 essay "Echoes of the Jazz Age,"
publication in 1941. Its hero, Monroe Stahr, is partly based
Fitzgerald wrote, "It was an age of miracles, it was an age of
on Irving Thalberg, MGM's "boy wonder" producer.
art, it was an age of excess, and it was an age of satire."
Fitzgerald's seventeen Pat Hobby stories, written for Esquire,
chronicle their hapless hero's misadventures as a
screenwriter. Scribner published a collection of them
posthumously in 1962.

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Other posthumous collections include The Crack-Up (1945), Fitzgerald at the Movies
The Basil and Josephine Stories (1973), and The Short
Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald (1989). These and the other Fitzgerald's masterpiece has not had the best of luck at the
books mentioned here demonstrate how much more there is movies. Only the 1974 incarnation, starring Robert Redford
to Fitzgerald than just one book, however great. as Jay Gatsby—and written by Francis Ford Coppola after
Truman Capote failed to deliver—even approaches the
poetry of the original. However, despite Redford's artful
performance, Fitzgerald scholar Matthew J. Bruccoli prefers
Works by F. Scott Fitzgerald Alan Ladd's 1949 interpretation of the role, finding Redford
 This Side of Paradise, 1920 too intelligent to capture Gatsby's naiveté.
 Flappers and Philosophers, 1920 Fitzgerald's other fiction has fared better on screen. The best
and most ambitious adaptation of his work may still be the
 The Beautiful and the Damned, 1922
BBC's award-winning Tender Is the Night (1985), scripted by
 Tales of the Jazz Age, 1922 Dennis Potter (Pennies From Heaven) and starring Peter
Strauss and Mary Steenburgen as Dick and Nicole Diver.
 The Vegetable, 1923
The Fitzgerald story "Teamed With Genius" became a witty
 The Great Gatsby, 1925
TV movie written and directed by Robert Thompson
 All the Sad Young Men, 1926 (Northern Exposure), featuring a strong lead performance
 Tender is the Night, 1934 from Christopher Lloyd as the author's comic screenwriter
alter ego, Pat Hobby. Joan Micklin Silver (Hester Street)
 Taps at Reveille, 1935 wrote and directed an acclaimed TV version of the story
"Bernice Bobs Her Hair," starring Shelley Duvall. Even Nobel
laureate Harold Pinter's somber feature adaptation of The
Fitzgerald's only publisher during his lifetime was Charles Last Tycoon (1976) for director Elia Kazan has its defenders,
Scribner's Sons. and Robert De Niro's delivery of Monroe Stahr's immortal
speech about the movies is a showstopper.

Posthumously Published
 The Love of the Last Tycoon: A Western. New York:
Scribner, 1941. (Originally published under editor
Edmund Wilson's title, The Last Tycoon.)
 The Crack-Up. Ed. Edmund Wilson. New York: New
Directions, 1945.
 The Basil and Josephine Stories. New York:
Scribners, 1973.
 The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald. New York:
Scribners, 1989.

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Which of the following adaptations
deserved the green light?
 The Great Gatsby (2013) Directed by Baz
Luhrmann. Written by Baz Lurhmann and Craig
Pearce. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Gatsby,
Carey Mulligan as Daisy, Joel Edgerton as Tom, and
Tobey Maguire as Nick.
 The Great Gatsby (2000) (TV) Directed by Robert
Markowitz. Written by John McLaughlin. Starring
Toby Stephens as Gatsby, Mira Sorvino as Daisy,
Martin Donovan as Tom, and Paul Rudd as Nick.
 The Great Gatsby (1974) Directed by Jack Clayton.
Written by Francis Ford Coppola. Starring Robert
Redford as Gatsby, Mia Farrow as Daisy, Bruce Dern
as Tom, Karen Black as Myrtle, Scott Wilson as
Wilson, Sam Waterston as Nick, Lois Chiles as
Jordan, and Howard Da Silva as Wolfsheim.
 The Great Gatsby (1949) Directed by Elliott Nugent.
Written by Cyril Hume and Richard Maibaum.
Starring Alan Ladd as Gatsby, Betty Field as Daisy,
Macdonald Carey as Nick, Ruth Hussey as Jordan,
Barry Sullivan as Tom, Howard Da Silva as Wilson,
and Shelley Winters as Myrtle.
 The Great Gatsby (1926) Directed by Herbert
Brenon. Written by Becky Gardiner from an
adaptation by Elizabeth Meehan. Starring Warner
Baxter as Gatsby, Lois Wilson as Daisy, Neil
Hamilton as Nick, Georgia Hale as Myrtle, and
William Powell as Wilson.

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Discussion Questions
1. The novel's action occurs in 1922 between June and
September. How does Nick's nonchronological
narration shape your response to the events
surrounding the mystery of Jay Gatsby?
2. Nick believes he is an honest, nonjudgemental
narrator. Do you agree?
3. Gatsby believes that the past can be repeated. Is he
right?
4. Why does Daisy sob into the "thick folds" of
Gatsby's beautiful shirts?
5. What do the faded eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg
symbolize? Is there a connection between this
billboard and the green light at the end of Daisy's
dock?
6. Perhaps the novel's climax occurs when Gatsby
confronts Tom in New York. Did Daisy's ultimate
choice surprise you? Is it consistent with her
character?
7. Do you agree with Nick's final assertion that Gatsby
is "worth the whole damn bunch put together"?
Why or why not?
8. How does Fitzgerald foreshadow the tragedies at
the end?
9. Does the novel critique or uphold the values of the
Jazz Age and the fears of the Lost Generation?
10. Fitzgerald wrote, "You don't write because you want
to say something, you write because you have
something to say." What did he have to say in
Gatsby?
11. Fitzgerald scholar Matthew J. Bruccoli claims: "The
Great Gatsby does not proclaim the nobility of the
human spirit; it is not politically correct; it does not
reveal how to solve the problems of life; it delivers
no fashionable or comforting messages. It is just a
masterpiece." Do you agree?

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Additional Resources
Other Works about Fitzgerald and Websites
the Jazz Age  F. Scott Fitzgerald Centenary
 Bruccoli, Matthew J. Some Sort of Epic Grandeur: This website includes biographical information as
The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald. rev. ed. Columbia: well as primary sources such as Fitzgerald's ledger.
University of South Carolina Press, 2002. [Link]
 Cowley, Malcolm. Exile's Return: A Literary Odyssey  F. Scott Fitzgerald Society
of the 1920s. New York: Norton, 1934. Rev. ed. An affiliate of the American Literature Association,
New York: Viking, 1951. this international society publishes the F. Scott
 Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald Society Newsletter and holds
Fitzgerald. Ed. Andrew Turnbull. New York: conferences.
Scribner, 1971. [Link]
 ---. The Notebooks of F. Scott Fitzgerald, ed.  American Masters: F. Scott Fitzgerald on [Link]
Matthew J. Bruccoli. New York: Harcourt Brace Go to the PBS American Masters website to hear
Jovanovich/Bruccoli Clark, 1978. author E.L. Doctorow’s lecture on Fitzgerald, a
 Graham, Sheilah. College of One. New York: Viking, career timeline, interviews, and photographs.
1967. [Link]
 Milford, Nancy. Zelda. New York: Harper & Row, s/f-scott-fitzgerald/essay-the-crack-up/1028/
1970.
 Ring, Frances Kroll. Against the Current: As I
Remember F. Scott Fitzgerald. San Francisco:
Ellis/Creative Arts, 1985.

If you're intrigued by the 1920s,


you might enjoy reading:
 Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises (1926)

If you're intrigued by novels about


lives of privilege, you might enjoy
reading:
 John O'Hara's Appointment in Samarra (1934)

If you're intrigued by the


Fitzgeralds, you might enjoy Zelda's
only novel:
 Zelda Fitzgerald's Save Me the Waltz (1932)

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Credits
Works Cited
Excerpts from the novel reprinted with permission of
Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Adult Publishing
Group, from The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. ©
1925 by Charles Scribner's Sons. Copyright renewed 1953 by The National Endowment for the Arts was established by
Frances Scott Fitzgerald Lanahan. Congress in 1965 as an independent agency of the federal
government. To date, the NEA has awarded more than $5
Bruccoli, Matthew J., Preface. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott billion to support artistic excellence, creativity, and
Fitzgerald. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1995. innovation for the benefit of individuals and communities.
Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Crack-Up. ed. Edmund Wilson. New The NEA extends its work through partnerships with state
York: New Directions, 1945. arts agencies, local leaders, other federal agencies, and the
philanthropic sector.
---. The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald. Reprinted with
permission of Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster Adult
Publishing Group from The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald, ed.
Andrew Turnbull. © 1963 by Frances Scott Fitzgerald
Lanahan. Copyright renewed © 1991.
---. This Side of Paradise. 1920. New York: Scribner, 1998.

Arts Midwest promotes creativity, nurtures cultural


Acknowledgments leadership, and engages people in meaningful arts
experiences, bringing vitality to Midwest communities and
Writers: Jon Peede, David Kipen ("Fitzgerald at the Movies"), enriching people’s lives. Based in Minneapolis, Arts Midwest
Erika Koss, and Dan Stone for the National Endowment for connects the arts to audiences throughout the nine-state
the Arts region of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, North
Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin. One of six non-
Cover image: "1929 Duesenberg Dual-Cowl Phaeton." by profit regional arts organizations in the United States, Arts
Source Interlink Media. Getty. Midwest’s history spans more than 30 years.

NEA Big Read Reader’s Guides are licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

© Arts Midwest

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Common questions

Powered by AI

Fitzgerald's personal and professional challenges greatly impacted his posthumous reputation and legacy. Despite his struggles with alcoholism, financial instability, and Zelda's mental illness affecting his output during his lifetime, his work gained renewed appreciation after his death . The Great Gatsby, initially a modest success, is now regarded as one of the greatest American novels, and Fitzgerald is celebrated for his probing insights into the Jazz Age and human aspirations . Although he died believing his career had failed, subsequent recognition as a master storyteller and cultural commentator demonstrates how his challenges informed a deeper understanding of the human condition, solidifying his legacy .

Fitzgerald’s exploration of excess and its consequences mirrors his own life experiences of living extravagantly during the Jazz Age. His and Zelda's notorious lifestyle of partying and spending is reflected in the characters and themes of his works, especially in The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night . These novels depict characters whose indulgence leads to personal and moral decay, mirroring Fitzgerald's own struggles with alcoholism and financial instability . This blend of autobiographical elements and fiction serves to critically frame the era's emphasis on hedonism and its impact on the individual .

Several factors contributed to the decline of Fitzgerald's literary output and personal life in the 1930s. The high living costs in Europe, along with the poor sales of The Great Gatsby, led to financial struggles, forcing him to rely on short stories and Hollywood screenwriting for income . Zelda Fitzgerald's mental health issues and institutionalization placed a further personal and emotional strain on him, influencing his work in Tender Is the Night . Additionally, his alcoholism hindered his productivity and exacerbated his personal troubles, contributing to a nine-year gap between novels before the release of Tender Is the Night .

Zelda Fitzgerald had a significant influence on F. Scott Fitzgerald's career as both an editor and a muse. During the 1920s, she served as his editor and confidante, helping shape his writing and offering feedback. Her own struggles with mental illness and the couple's tumultuous marriage heavily influenced Fitzgerald's work, especially in novels like Tender Is the Night, where the character Nicole Diver reflects aspects of Zelda's life . Their relationship, marked by competition and collaboration, also provided material for Fitzgerald's exploration of themes such as love, chaos, and disillusionment .

F. Scott Fitzgerald's works often reflect the themes of the Jazz Age through both personal experience and cultural commentary. His participation in the extravagant lifestyle of the 1920s is mirrored in novels like The Great Gatsby, which critiques the era's hedonism, moral reevaluation, and social experimentation . Fitzgerald coined the term 'Jazz Age' to describe the period's distinctive culture, characterized by its music, fashion, and decadence. Despite his own indulgences, his writings judge this lifestyle as ultimately empty or destructive, evidenced by the tragic trajectories of his characters .

Fitzgerald's depiction of the Jazz Age extends beyond mere chronicling by providing a critique of its moral and cultural implications. While he famously coined the term to describe the flamboyant lifestyle of the 1920s, his narratives reveal the underlying disillusionment and emptiness amid the era's prosperity . The Great Gatsby, for instance, uses the character of Jay Gatsby to critique the superficiality and fleeting nature of wealth-driven aspirations, highlighting the corruption of the American Dream . In Tender Is the Night, Fitzgerald further critiques the excesses and personal ruin that accompany the pursuit of pleasure, reflecting a nuanced view of the Jazz Age as a period rich in irony and tragedy .

The social and cultural climate of the 1920s, characterized by economic prosperity, prohibition, and a break from traditional values, greatly influenced characters and themes in The Great Gatsby. The novel's depiction of wealth, decadence, and moral ambiguity reflects the era's excessive lifestyle and disillusionment . Jay Gatsby’s mysterious fortune and extravagant parties highlight the illicit activities and bootlegging that were rampant during Prohibition . Additionally, the novel explores the superficiality of the American Dream, embodied by Gatsby's longing for material success and social status, which ultimately leads to his downfall .

Fitzgerald’s assertion about The Great Gatsby is largely accurate. The novel does not offer comforting messages, but rather acts as a critique of the American Dream and a commentary on the moral emptiness of the era's materialism and hedonism . Through the tragic fate of Jay Gatsby and the moral vacuity of characters like Tom and Daisy Buchanan, Fitzgerald highlights the era's moral decay and the hollowness of pursuing wealth and status at the expense of genuine human connection . The narrative's enduring impact and its profound thematic depth support its status as a masterpiece, despite its lack of easy or optimistic resolutions .

Magazine publications were crucial to Fitzgerald's literary success and financial stability. He published over 150 short stories in magazines like The Saturday Evening Post, McCall's, and Esquire, earning more from these stories than his novels. These publications were not only a source of income but also served as a platform for testing themes and characters that would appear in his novels . Fitzgerald's ability to attract high fees for his stories by 1928, up to $3,500 per piece, provided him with financial security and enabled him to continue developing his literary career .

The term "Lost Generation," associated with disillusionment and existential uncertainty following World War I, is significant in Fitzgerald's work as it captures the ethos of a generation searching for meaning in a world destabilized by conflict. In This Side of Paradise, Fitzgerald portrays characters grappling with disillusionment and a loss of faith in traditional values, reflecting society's struggle during this period . The Great Gatsby further explores these themes of moral reevaluation and social experimentation, emphasizing the futile pursuit of happiness through wealth and status . Fitzgerald’s writings reflect a critique of the era’s moral and cultural landscape, encapsulated in the "Lost Generation" identity .

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