The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald M. Boudreau English 12.

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Presentation transcript:

The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald M. Boudreau English 12

1. Cultural Context 1. Cultural Context The New American Dream

America inTransition "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 Key influences and events: 1922 foreign policy of Isolationism 1929 Stock Market Crash 1932 New Deal era

WWI and the “Lost Generation” World War I ended in The total number of military and civilian casualties in World War I was over 37 million. Disillusioned because of the “total warfare”, the generation that fought and survived has come to be called “the lost generation.”

WWI and the “Lost Generation”

The “Roaring” Twenties While the sense of loss was readily apparent among expatriate American artists who remained in Europe after the war, back home the disillusionment took a less obvious form. America seemed to throw itself headlong into a decade of madcap behavior and materialism, a decade that has come to be called the Roaring Twenties.

The influence of jazz The era is also known as the Jazz Age, when the music called jazz, promoted by such recent inventions as the phonograph and the radio, swept up from New Orleans to capture the national imagination. Improvised and wild, jazz broke the rules of music, just as the Jazz Age thumbed its nose at the rules of the past.

The New Femininity Among the rules broken were the age-old conventions guiding the behavior of women. The new woman demanded the right to vote and to work outside the home. Symbolically, she cut her hair into a boyish “bob” and bared her calves in the short skirts of the fashionable twenties “flapper.”

The New Femininity

Prohibition Another rule often broken was the Eighteenth Amendment to the Constitution, or Prohibition, which banned the public sale of alcoholic beverages from 1919 until its appeal in Speak-easies, nightclubs, and taverns that sold liquor were often raided, and gangsters made illegal fortunes as bootleggers, smuggling alcohol into America from Canada and St. Pierre et Miquelon.

2. F. Scott Fitzgerald Biographical notes

Who is F. Scott Fitzgerald? Born in 1896, in St. Paul, Minnesota. He attended Princeton University joined the army. Met his wife Zelda (his muse). Published The Great Gatsby in Regarded as the speaker of the Jazz Age Died in 1940.

3. What is the American Dream?

The American Dream This concept refers to an attitude of hope and faith that looks forward to the fulfillment of human wishes and desires and is intrinsically linked to the American constitution: “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.”

4. Themes The Great Gatsby

Major Themes The consequences of the “American Dream”The consequences of the “American Dream” The impact of povertyThe impact of poverty DiscriminationDiscrimination ExploitationExploitation HypocrisyHypocrisy CorruptionCorruption

5. Pre-Reading Questions The Great Gatsby

Pre-reading Questions 1.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. 2.What do you think of the "American Dream"? 3.Have you ever wanted to relive or redo a moment from your past? Describe the situation. Can a person be trapped by the past?

References bchsapliterature.files.wordpress.com/.../the-great-gats.