Introduction to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby The Life and Times of F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Is it possible to get a second chance at life
Advertisements

F. Scott Fitzgerald Colton Sledge 2 nd Period US History.
F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby, and the Roaring 20’s Mr. Moccia’s English III IB.
By F. Scott Fitzgerald.  Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald  Born in 1896, St. Paul, Minnesota  Named after famous, second cousin Francis Scott Key.
Works and Connection to The Great Gatsby Brian Laksh James Cornish Laura Beckman Avni Patel.
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age. The Roaring 20’s The 20’s are also referred to as “The Jazz Age,” a term coined by F. Scott Fitzgerald The Jazz.
Introduction to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby English 3.
Born into an upper-class family in St. Paul, Minnesota in Was encouraged to become a writer at the age of 15, and seriously began to hone his craft.
Author of The Great Gatsby As we go through these slides, be thinking of elements from the novel that were present in Fitzgerald’s life.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD. EARLY LIFE F. Scott Fitzgerald was born Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald on September 24, 1896, in St. Paul, Minnesota. His namesake.
The Great Gatsby The 1920s – ‘The Jazz Age’. Fitzgerald was the most famous chronicler of 1920s America, an era that he dubbed “the Jazz Age.” Written.
Introduction to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby.
The Great Gatsby The American Dream. The Author: F. Scott Fitzgerald Born to a once wealthy family with little money left. Father drifted from job to.
F. Scott Fitzgerald. Birth and Death Born September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota Died December 21, 1940.
F. Scott Fitzgerald ( ). Biography Born as Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald in St. Paul Minnesota on September 24, 1896 Born as Francis Scott Key.
F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography Fitzgerald was named after his distant relative, Francis Scott Key. Fitzgerald was born.
The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald. “Chop Suey” – Edward Hopper (1929) Do Now: What does this painting suggest about society in the 1920s?
Character list.
F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography Fitzgerald was born into an upper middle class family. He split his childhood between New.
Introduction to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby English III Honors Mr. Higgins.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD LITERARY MOVEMENT: MODERNISM - refers to the radical shift in artistic and cultural sensibilities as shown in the art and.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Author of The Great Gatsby Chronicler of the Jazz Age.
American Literature F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Great Gatsby.
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. A Brief History of F. Scott Fitzgerald Born Sept. 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota Born Sept. 24, 1896 in St.
S h o rt st o r y a n d n o v el w ri t e r B y R a n d y.
F. Scott Fitzgerald. Early life Born Sept. 24, 1896 as Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald in Minnesota Cousin of Francis Scott Key-writer of the National Anthem.
Life in the 1920s. Events in the 1920s  WWI ends on November 11, 1918 (Armistice)  : Known as the Jazz Age  January 1919: 18th Amendment.
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD THE GREAT GATSBY English III.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on September 24, 1896.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Timeline The Great Gatsby Connections.
F. Scott Fitzgerald  September 24, 1896: Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota  His father, Edward Fitzgerald failed as a manufacturer.
1920s: The Jazz Age Introduction to The Great Gatsby.
Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald One of the greatest American writers of the twentieth century.
Introduction to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby The bulk of this presentation was prepared by Mrs. Snipes & Mrs. Lutes; however, I have modified.
The Great Gatsby F Scott Fitzgerald. Author F. Scott Fitzgerald ’ s Life F. Scott Fitzgerald and the American Dream F. Scott Fitzgerald's life is a tragic.
F. Scott Fitzgerald The Great Gatsby. Early Life: Born in St. Paul, Minnesota Distant relative of Francis Scott Key His father was a business.
F. Scott FITZGERALD.
F. Scott Fitzgerald 1896 – F. Scott Fitzgerald Biography Fitzgerald was named after his distant relative, Francis Scott Key. Fitzgerald was born.
Author: The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald Born in St. Paul, Minnesota. Named after Francis Scott Key, the author of the national anthem and a distant relative of.
F. Scott Fitzgerald- The Voice of a Generation.
F. Scott Fitzgerald: Fame, Jazz, and Gatsby Ms. Wolfe.
Life of Scott F. Fitzgerald By: Devon Larsen. Birth of Scott Born on September 24 th, 1896 Scott was born in St. Paul, Minnesota of the United States.
Jazz Age By: Janice Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby Group of women / photo by Harry M. Rhoads. Source: Library of Congress – American Memory.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Born in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1896, Fitzgerald became the spokes person for the “Lost Generation” of the 1920s. Highly educated in.
 Born on September 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota.  Son of Edward Fitzgerald, an alcoholic that couldn’t keep a job, and Mary McQuillan, whose family.
Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald By: Melanie and Reagan, and Seb.
Francis Scott Fitzgerald By: Ashton Fields. Background He was born on September 24, 1896 He died on December 21, 1940 He wrote short stories and novels(which.
F. Scott Fitzgerald & The Great Gatsby. Early Biography  Sept 24,1896: Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald born in St. Paul, MN  Attends an expensive boarding.
The Great Gatsby A look at the Jazz Age, Modernism, and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Reading and Literacy Promotion Through ICT Book of the term by F. Scott Fitzgerald Tender is the Night (1934) Vocational High School of Veterinary Medicine,
English III.  Born in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1896  Father failed in first career, then became a salesman for Proctor & Gamble in upstate New York, became.
-Born Sept. 24, 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota. - Full name Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald -His early life was shaped by the fact that his mother’s family.
FRANCIS SCOTT KEY FITZGERALD By Jessica Collins. EARLY LIFE  Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on September 24,  His.
F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Great Gatsby. F. Scott Fitzgerald Born in St. Paul, MN- Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald Born in St. Paul, MN- Francis.
F. Scott Fitzgerald Full Name: Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (Francis Scott Key was a distant cousin to Fitzgerald’s mother) F. Scott was born in St. Paul.
February 25 - Jr. American Lit.
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
Author Biography. Author Biography Author Biography Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald was born on September 24, His father came from an aristocratic.
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
Modernism & The Great Gatsby
F. SCOTT FITZGERALD, THE GREAT GATSBY, AND THE ROARING 20’S
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
F. Scott Fitzgerald and The Jazz Age
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
F. Scott Fitzgerald & The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Jazz Age
F. Scott Fitzgerald Full Name: Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (Francis Scott Key was a distant cousin to Fitzgerald’s mother) F. Scott was born in St. Paul.
Presentation transcript:

Introduction to F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby The Life and Times of F. Scott Fitzgerald

Overview The names, "Scott and Zelda," have become immediately recognizable to people throughout the world, many of whom have never read any of F. Scott Fitzgerald's fiction. They have become a fabled couple, legends of a bygone era, the embodiment of the triumph and tragedy that afflicted the decade with which they are most associated, the 1920s.

The Lost Generation Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald, now regarded as the spokesman for the “Lost Generation” of the 1920s, was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, in His childhood and youth seem, in retrospect, as poetic as the works he later wrote. The life he lived became “the stuff of fiction,” the characters and the plots a rather thinly-disguised autobiography.

The Vision Like Jay Gatsby, the title character of his most famous novel, Fitzgerald created a vision which he wanted to become, a “Platonic conception of himself,” and “to this conception he was faithful to the end.”

Education Fitzgerald was educated at parochial prep schools where he received strict Roman Catholic training. The religious instruction never left him. Ironically, he was denied burial in a Catholic cemetery because of his rather uproarious lifestyle which ended in depression and alcoholism.

In the fall of 1909, during his second year at St. Paul Academy, Fitzgerald began publishing in the school magazine. Sent East for a disciplined education, he entered The Newman School, whose student body came from wealthy Catholic families all over the country. At The Newman School he developed a friendship and intense rapport with Father Sigourney Webster Fay, a trustee and later headmaster of the school and the prototype for a character in This Side of Paradise, Fitzgerald’s first novel, published in 1920.

The Ivy League Thanks to another relative’s money, Fitzgerald was able to enroll in Princeton in He never graduated from the Ivy League school; in fact, he failed several courses during his undergraduate years. However, he wrote revues for the Triangle Club, Princeton’s musical comedy group, and “donned swishy, satiny dresses to romp onstage” alongside attractive chorus girls.

Years later, after enjoying some literary fame, he was asked to speak at Princeton, an occasion which endeared the school to him in new ways. Today, Princeton houses his memoirs, including letters from Ernest Hemingway, motion picture scripts, scrapbooks, and other mementos.

Meeting Zelda He withdrew from Princeton and entered the war in 1917, commissioned a second lieutenant in the army. While in Officers Candidate School in Alabama, he met and fell in love with Zelda Sayre, a relationship which is replicated in Jay Gatsby’s obsession with Daisy and her fascination with a military man.

He never made it to the European front, but he did come to the attention of New York publishers by the end of the war. Despite Zelda’s breaking their engagement, they became re- engaged that fall. Their marriage produced one daughter—Scottie, who died in In 1919 his earnings totaled $879; the following year, following the publication of This Side of Paradise, an instant success, his earnings increased to $18,000.

Europe and the Affair By 1924 it was clear that Fitzgerald needed a change. He, Zelda, and Scottie moved to Europe, near the French Riviera, where he first met Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein, and Edith Wharton. Before long, Zelda met and had an affair with Edouard Josanne, a relationship which Fitzgerald at first ignored but ultimately forced to a showdown.

His writing may have profited because of her affair—according to biographer Andrew Turnbull, Fitzgerald’s jealousy “sharpened the edge of Gatsby’s and gave weight to Tom Buchanan’s bullish determination to regain his wife.”

To increase earnings he wrote some 160 short stories for magazines, works which, by his own admission, lacked luster.

After Zelda’s alcoholism had several times forced her commitment to an institution, Scott went to Hollywood to write screenplays, and struggled unsuccessfully to complete a final novel, The Last Tycoon. He died in December of 1940 after a lifelong battle with alcohol and a series of heart attacks.

As early as 1920, Fitzgerald had in mind a tragic novel. He wrote to the president of Princeton that his novel would “say something fundamental about America, that fairy tale among nations.”

The Tragic Novel Fitzgerald saw our history as a great pageant and romance, the history of all aspiration—not just the American dream but the human dream—and, he wrote, “If I am at the end of it that too is a place in the line of the pioneers.”

Perhaps because of that vision, he has been called America’s greatest modern romantic writer, a purveyor of timeless fiction with a gift of evocation that has yet to be surpassed. His works reflect the spirit of his times, yet they are timeless. One cannot fail to notice how much of himself Fitzgerald put into all his work; he spoke of writing as a “sheer paring away of oneself.”

A mélange of characters replicate or at least suggest people in his acquaintance. Gatsby seems almost to be an existential extension of Fitzgerald’s posture, a persona created perhaps as a premonition of his own tragic end.

The almost poetic craftsmanship of Fitzgerald’s prose, combined with his insight into the American experience, presented an imperishable portrait of his age, securing for him a permanent and enviable place in literary history.

The Tragic Relationship Scott and Zelda were charming and extraordinarily beautiful has added a tragic dimension to their story; like the subjects of one of Fitzgerald's novels, they seem the embodiment of "the beautiful and damned."

That Fitzgerald achieved a posthumous resurrection as a great American novelist does not make the sadness of their lives any the less poignant. Indeed, if anything, it etches ever more clearly in our minds, the pathos of their last days.

Sources: Lathbury, Roger. American Modernism ( ). New York: Facts on File, Gay, Peter. Modernism: The Lure of Heresy: From Baudelaire to Beckett and Beyond. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., Inc., 2008.