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Published byWalter Dustin Smith Modified over 9 years ago
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Description - p. 23 ASHES are what is left when the fire fades out... Hellish, land in decay (result of decadence) T. S. Eliot’s “Wasteland” (1922) Garbage Dump in Corona, Queens, located along railroad from Manhattan to Long Island
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1930s: City purchases Corona Dump and cleans it up for the 1939 World’s Fair:
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Later, served as 1964-65 World’s Fair:
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Queens Zoo, U.S. Open, CitiField, etc.
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Residence (& repair shop – a “shadow of a garage”) of George Wilson (and wife Myrtle) Imagery – pp. 25-26 Tom’s affair is with Myrtle Wilson … her motivation?? (She hopes to escape her tedious and lifeless existence in the Valley of Ashes) Is her “dream” realistic?? Why/why not?? (No … social status!)
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Tom, Myrtle, & Nick … then: Catherine (Myrtle’s sister), Mr. McKee (feminine, artistic), & his wife (obnoxious, loud, shrill) Significance of Mrs. Wilson changing “costumes” & personality (pp. 30-31)? She is role-playing, pretending she is part of high class society Examples of how Gatsby’s name again comes up? (shrouded in mystery & rumors (p. 32))
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Myrtle hates being married, and is simply waiting to marry Tom (who claims he hates Daisy, a “Catholic” – Nick shocked at “the elaborateness of the lie”) Why did Myrtle marry George?? (b/c she “thought he was a gentleman” (34)) She becomes upset when she learns that George borrowed a suit to get married in) Importance of CLOTHES motif (external, superficial) In fact, how did Myrtle’s affair with Tom begin? (with her fascination of his CLOTHES (dress suit, patent leather shoes, white shirt))
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Myrtle’s cries of “Daisy” cause Tom to punch her, breaking her nose https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIReFmjLp_Q https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIReFmjLp_Q This interrupts the unreal, hazy, smoke-filled atmosphere of unreality that had pervaded the party
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