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The Great Gatsby Chapter 1.

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Presentation on theme: "The Great Gatsby Chapter 1."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Great Gatsby Chapter 1

2 Announcements: Device Entry this week – our word is oxymoron. Due Friday night the 18th by 11:59, as usual. Stylistic Analysis Paragraphs (The Yellow Wallpaper) are all graded – you can view the comments on Turniitin.com and see your grades on PowerSchool. (In-class exams – next week.) Over the weekend we read chapters 1 and 2 – Chapter 3 is assigned for HW tonight – due Thursday The goal of this unit is to focus on societal issues found in The Great Gatsby that are still seen today. Your homework assignment is to draft a one page reflection on a prominent issue that is still apparent today. Due Thursday

3 OXYMORON Definition: a figure of speech in which apparently contradictory terms appear in conjunction Or in other terms – two words that are placed side by side that appear to be contradictory. How is oxymoron different than paradox? Oxymoron refers to two words placed side by side that contradict each other (Jumbo shrimp) whereas a paradox is a larger idea that is contradictory (In order to have peace, we must go to war).

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5 Examples: Accurate estimate Advanced basic Agree to disagree
Alone together Among the first Awfully pretty Civil War Definitely maybe Firm estimate Free rent Mean smile Mild jalapeño

6 READING QUIZ CH. 1/2 1) What was the advice that Nick’s father gave to him? 2) On what island / in what community does Nick rent a house? Why does Nick move to that house? 3) Who is Nick’s neighbor? 4) Who lives in the Valley of the Ashes?   5) What is Mr. McKee's profession?  

7 JOURNAL PROMPT In no less than a half of a page, please respond to the following question In the first two chapters of the novel the reader has : i) seen Gatsby from a distance ii) heard other characters talk about him iii) heard Nick’s thoughts on him Yet, we have not met him Discussion – why has Fitzgerald structured the opening chapters in this way?

8 SETTING The novel is set in New York in the 1920’s
- at Nick Carraway's bungalow and Gatsby's mansion on West Egg, at the Buchanan's mansion on East Egg, in various places in New York City including Myrtle's apartment, the Plaza Hotel, and a restaurant across from The Metropole, and in the Valley of Ashes.

9 Long Island Sound

10 The main purpose of this first chapter is to introduce the characters and setting of the book.
Nick Carraway is the narrator He is a young man in his late twenties who grew up in the Midwest in a prominent, respected middle class family. He says he is a decent human being who was taught at an early age to reserve judgment, a trait which has made him a friend to many people in his life. He graduated from New Haven (Yale) in 1915, and then served in the military in World War I.

11 Nick Cont’d He has come to New York City to learn the bond business, like many of his friends. He has rented a home on West Egg, one of two identical (in appearance) egg-shaped islands located on Long Island Sound, twenty miles from the city. His house is a small bungalow, renting for $80 per month; it is really an eyesore located between two large mansions. The one on his right is a "colossal affair," fashioned after a City Hall in Normandy, France, complete with marble swimming pool and forty acres of lawn and gardens. Nick has learned that a Mr. Jay Gatsby owns and inhabits the mansion.

12 The Buchanans lived in an enormous Georgian style mansion

13 The Story Begins…. Nick has been invited to dinner at the Buchanans.
When he arrives at their home, he is amazed at its size and the expansive grounds that run from the house for a quarter of a mile down to the beach.

14 Tom Buchanan Thirty years old.
Nick immediately notices that Tom (Tom and Nick went to college together) has changed since his college days. He is blond, handsome, and muscular. He appears to be sturdy and arrogant. Nick comments that Tom has a "cruel body, capable of enormous leverage."

15 Daisy Buchanan Tom's wife and Nick's cousin, appears to be light as a feather. She sits inside the living room on a sofa and is dressed in a lightweight, white garment that is rippling in the breeze, giving the young woman the image of floating. Her voice, light and thrilling to Nick, intensifies the cool, airy picture of her appearance. She is shallow and careless.

16 Jordan Baker Daisy’s friend. She is a professional golfer
She is shallow and vain, much like Daisy

17 Dinner… Tom receives a phone call and leaves the table. Daisy leaves.
Jordan Baker tells Nick that Tom has a mistress in the city.

18 After Dinner…. Daisy reveals "turbulent emotions" to Nick.
She tells him that when she had her daughter two years ago, Tom was nowhere around. She is glad that the child is a daughter, for she feels she can raise her to be "a fool--that's the best thing a girl can be in the world, a beautiful little fool." She then admits her misery to Nick and says, "I've had a very bad time, and I'm pretty cynical about everything."

19 After Dinner Cont’d Nick and Daisy go inside to join Tom and Jordan.
Tom warns Nick about Daisy's complaints and says, "Don't believe everything you hear." Daisy teases Nick and Jordan about fixing them up together. They mention the rumor of Nick’s engagement, but he denies it, saying that she was just a friend.

20 The Evening Ends Jordan has a tournament in the morning and needs to rest. Nick decides to leave as well. As he drives home, he is confused and disgusted and doesn’t know what to think.

21 Nick Sees Gatsby Nick stands outside to take in the view of the bay.
He notices that his neighbor is also outside, staring at the stars with hands in his pocket. Just as Nick prepares to greet him, the neighbor stretches out his arms to the dark water and appears to tremble. Nick looks out to the bay to see what attracts the neighbor's attention, but he sees only a single green light, probably at the end of a dock in East Egg. When Nick looks back toward his neighbor, the man has vanished. Nick Sees Gatsby


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