Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Comparing Gatsby and AOI
- DREAMS/FREEDOM
- DREAMS SHATTERED
- Gatsby's is more shattered
because of the American
Dream and to more of an
extreme version, Newland's is
self induced and he could
change the outcome himself
- Was it worth it? No, he lost everything, the
wilsons died, leads to an unravelling at the end
of the novel and its all for nothing - no one at
the funeral. BUT it could have been worth it -
his unique characterisation as "son of God". He
has a larger than like persona, even if it was a
short life it was full of adventure, his dreams
took him all over the world. He could only have
sought happiness through striving for
something greater than himself.
- Mostly optimistic illustratiokn of
american dream - people of different
races racing towards NYC, a city of
unfathomable possibility. However,
nicks condensation towards people in
other cars undermines this, reinforces
racial hierarchy and disrupts american
dream - there is competition "haughty
rivalry" with the "modish negroes".
Nick's laughter at them - he laughs at
equality
- Gatsby's dream was "already behind him" but still admires Gatsby's hope for a better life and reach
towards a brighter future
- Deferred dreams - 5 years pass
between initial infatuation and the
attempt to win Daisy back - these
dreams are doomed to fail
- Gatsby "stretched out his
arms" - the green light -
people are always reaching
towards something greater
but it is just out of reach -
foreshadows his ending and
marks him as a dreamer
rather than Tom/Daisy who
are born with money so
don't need to strive
- In the final dinner party Ellen is not as vibrant, she has a
"pale smile" - she's taken the toll of new york society,
she is a shadow of her former self, the paleness of her
emotions are a contrast to the opera when she has red
cheeks, she has to lose in the end - result of new york
treatment. May is victorious, she rises up her "blue eyes
wet with victory"
- GEORGE AND MYRTLE: disempowered due
to lack of money, Mrytle has access but has
abuse, George has to serve Tom
- TOM AND DAISY do not need the american
dream, they instigate a large amount of tragedy
through their recklessness
- Income inequality and vastly
different starts to life strongly affect
the characters outcomes, the way
they live their lives, their morality
and how much they dream does not
matter - this is antithetical to the
american dream
- The destruction of 3 lives and the cynical portrayal of
old money illustrates a dead or dying american
dream, those whose dream end up dead, those born
into privilege get to keep it without consequences
- american dream has its foundings in the declaration
of independence and the first european settlers
because of the basic ideas that every man and
woman regardless of their birth should be treated
and seen equally - the founding fathers put into law
this revolutionary idea as the desire for happiness =
ambition
- Fitzgerald as ….‘A writer who portrayed the
beautiful and rich as essentially damned and
implied that the american dream was little more
than a thinly veiled nightmare’ - John W Bicknell
- “Fitzgerald’s novel showed that the
American Dream ideal had already been
tarnished” - Stephanie Forward
- MIKE HALDENBY - THE
GREAT GASTBY IS ABOUT
DREAMING
- RICHARD RULAND - GATSBY IS A
DANDY OF DESIRE WHO SEEKS
TO TRANSFORM MONEY INTO
LOVE, TIME INTO AN ENDLESS
INSTANT OF CONTEMPLATION,
THE CLOCK INTO A DREAM. HE
FLOATS IN IS 'INEFFABLE
GAUDINESS' ON THE
EVERLASTING AMERICAN
DREAM
- ‘The journey from West Egg to New York City
represents the journey to the American
Dream and The valley of ashes is symbolic of
the fact that this journey goes not without it’s
challenges’ - Paul Staveley
- chapter 1 places us in 1922- time of hollow
decadence among the wealthy
- dire state of VALLEY OF ASHES - insight into
the negative effects of unrestrained capitalism
and dismantles the idea that the american
dream can be achievable for everyone the
"grotesque gardens" "rising smoke" and "ash
grey men" represent the dreams of the people
which have been reduced to ashes with people
themselves "crumbling" in the aftermath of their
failure to achieve success - this dramatisation
between rich and poor implies the unequal
spread of money is not just an issue in the novel
but for america as a whole
- “The valley of ashes contrasts markedly with other
settings in the text. It has come about as a byproduct of
capitalism because it is the result of industrial dumping.
Behind the glamour of the eggs, less fortunate citizens
pay a heavy price.” - Stephanie Forward.
- tragic love story on the surface but is a pessimistic
critique of the american dream, critiques the idea
that america is a meritocracy where anyone can
rise the top
- GG shows how in the 1920's the american
dream started morphing into something less
about equal opportunity and more about the
acquisition of material things. Gatsby
"believed in the green light, the orgiastic
future that year by year recedes before us...
tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our
arms farther" - the american dream had
become a pursuit of happiness as defined by
materialistic things because it was driven by
greed it was never attainable, someone else
always had more
- the greed that had begun to define america dream led to
the stock market crash of 1929 and the great
depression. The decadent parties/ wild jazz music
epitomised in GG resulted ultimately in the corruption
of the american dream as the unrestrained desire for
money and pleasure surpassed more noble goals. As
Fitzgerald saw it (and nick describes in chapter 9), it
was originally about discovery, individualism, pursuit
of happiness. In 1920's however, easy money and
relaxed social values have corrupted this dream,
especially on the East coast
- in the midst of an economic boom - it fuelled the belief that
anyone could make it, however the bubble popped in 1929,
the novel foreshadows the crash
- 1920s was tumultuous due to increased
immigration, changing women roles (right
to vote in 1919) and extraordinary income
inequality.
- LOVE
- Neither hero finds love, Gatsby's
is always out of reach and
Newline never seises the
opportunity
- Gatsby's dream is perhaps
one of companionship
- Daisy and Gatsby's first meeting - "can't repeat the past? he
cried indecorously, "why of course you can!". This is one of the
few times Nick has power over Gatsby because Gatsby gets
distracted by Daisy and lets his guard down, loses his
performance. Gatsby has never danced with anyone at his
parties before, he has waited for Daisy which suggests a kind
of purity
- They are both yearning for an
unattainable ideal, Gatsby for the
American Dream and Newline for
freedom
- "He felt himself oppressed by
this creation of factitious
purity... because it was
supposed to be what he wanted,
what he had a right to do"
- Newland is too scared to
break conventions at the
end of the novel, this is
what his whole life has
been so to break it would
be to mock his entire life
- WOMEN
- May; "the freedom of
judgement which she had
been carefully trained not
to possess"
- Newland is condescending to May
for not being like Ellen, May is
useless because she has
succumbed to society and not
individualism
- Because the social code
enforces such strict rules for
society, personal freedom is
sacrificed, Newline cannot
follow his passion, he must do
his duty. It is difficult to break
out and be an individual from
society, the society dislikes and
feels threatened by any
difference. We're focused on a
articular strata of society
where it's incredibly difficult to
be an individual
- Cynthid Griffin -
Newland and Ellen both
perceive the other
primarily in terms of
some romanticised
personal need
- AOI is a study into the facade
on the inner circle (the gilded
age) and reaching the money
attainable from the american
dream
- once you are inside the world of
power, privallege, prestige, the
walls starts closing in. The top of
the "slippery pyramid" is
precarious and cut throat with
many rules and regulations. AOI
describes these rules of conduct as
suffocating. It scribe the comfort
of having a place in society even as
it describes the claustrophobia
that this society inspires
- About a period in America
where the old money tradition
is about to be marginalised by
people who can actually get
rich by doing something. The
american dream had its
antagonists and these
established aristocrats are
them, perched on high
- GATSBY
- Comes from humble roots and rises to
wealth but in traditional american
dream people achieve their goals
through good, honest work - he does
this through crime so he cannot be the
perfect example of the american dream
- Although he has the money to make
himself elegant, he lacks the behaviour
and decorum as shown by his bizarre
idiolect using phrases such as "old sport"
to sound like a british aristocrat -
perhaps he is not a symbol for the
american dream, it may not be true at all
- whilst shown to be a joyful and decadent era, fitzgerlad
displays an overarching cynicism towards the american
dream - gatsby himself is supposed to represent it but is a
fraud. the 18th amendment in 1919 banned the sale of
alcohol creating a thriving underworld designed to satisfy
the massive demand for bootleg liquor. this is how gatsby
obtained his wealth as "a lot of these newly rich people are
just bootleggers"
- a marxist would view the american dream as
hollow and corrupt here because a nobody like
George who actually works hard gets nowhere -
Gatsby shows the only way a poor man can be
successful is through crime
- Popular history depicts the interwar period as a
time of raucous frivolity, speakeasies, flappers and
stock market millions but only an elite enjoyed this
easy lifestyle. In America in the 1920s 1/10th of 1%
of the wealthiest families made as much money
each year as 42% of the poorest families
- Tredell; Gangsterism provided a means
rapidly upward mobility for certain
members of some ethnic groups at a time
when restrictions on immigration were
being tightened
- Gatsby is an optimist/idealist - he sees the beauty in life,
romantic idealist, not just an optimist but completely
unique, one of a kind because of his "gift for hope" - he is
a beautiful dreamer
- Has a habit of disappearing
suddenly - he is there as an enigma
and then gone - this feeds his
mysterious nature and give him a
light presence in the narrative - he
is not really a person but a dream
or ideal
- Marius Bewley - gatsby is not merely a
likeable, romantic hero; he is a creature of
math is whom is incarnated the aspiration
and the ordeal of his race"
- Novel ends with the
past, Fitzgerald shows
us we cannot repeat the
past but it always
follows us and is
inescapable - left with a
myth of gatsby, he is
sacrificed for the sins of
others foul dust
- “It is, of course, Gatsby who
dreams the most vividly (and
who comes closest to
transforming his dream into
reality. The closer he comes,
however, the more painful is
his failure).” - Rob Worrall
- In ‘The Age of Innocence’ .. ‘perfect
freedom, like that of perfect happiness
is nothing but an alluring phantom
that leads to inevitable destruction’ -
Cynthia Griffin Wolff
- MONEY
- OLD
MONEY
- APPEARENCES
- NEW MONEY/JAZZ
AGE
- Wharton is against the hedonistic
lifestyles of economic boom and jazz
age
- Nicholas Tredell; if the war caused some social
dislocation, it also stimulated the American
economy and enhanced the global influence on the
USA, confirming it as a world power and
diminishing its sense of cultural inferiority to
europe
- Nick makes no meaningful relationships in the east and instead must return home
to the mid-west, this reveals a shallow, superficial party society lacking in any
human connection - consumer consumption as an isolating philosophy. Similarly
Newland returns to what he knows at the end
- Nick is indecisive - he feels morally repelled by the
vulgarity but he is too fascinated to leave
- Fitzgerald portrays the nouveau riche as
vulgar, gaudy and lacking i social graces
- GATSBY
- Everyone is able to achieve
money in Gatsby but the new
money of the American dream is
not realistic, it cannot get you
anywhere - gatsby has the
greatest fall, it is very pessimistic
- people go to his parties, not his
funeral because they liked his
wealth, not the man himself
- Culture of worshipping money is a society wide trend.
- "people were not invited - they went
there" - no one visits out of friendship,
just for the spectacle alone.
- From a Fredian perspective - would note
it allows people in 1920s to satisfy id's
over ego's, it is a culture driven by
desires and lacking in moral codes. a
culture with a strong id but with a weak
superego
- His notriety comes from his wealth.
- Daisy's "voice is full of money" - explicitly connects
her with money - gatsby's desire for wealth, money
and status are more desirable than daisy herself
- the pursuit of daisy and the pursuit of money are
actually the same thing - Fitzgerald shows that
desire and pursuit of wealth is a hollow goal and
one fixed with no emotional connections
- Both the 1920s and the
1870s are times when
people were not their
true selves, both
novels show that men
need power, money
and a reputation and
people desire wealth,
power and acceptance
- Lots of close detail in AOI about clothes, houses, Mrs manson
mignotts house; "by building a cream coloured stone (when
brown sand stone seemed as much the only wear as a frock
coat in the afternoon"
- Its the guided age - hides the downfalls of
whats actually going on
- All of New york turns out for the beaufort ball but
under the surface they know he is scandalous, his
adultery is acceptable as long as they are discreet
- Anne Macmaster - wharton's novel maps a paradox located
at the intersection of several ironies; the history of slavery
in the land of the free, the fear of the foreign in a nation of
immigrants, the drive towards conformity behind the
creed of individualsm
- 1870-1900 = gilded age - period of growth of industry + increased
wealth that hid corruption. As wealth rose in the east, appearance
became everything. they thought you could buy class, based on
European fashions. Dark period of the treatment of minorities. it
was the title of Twain and Warner's novel which gave the era its
identity - a fascination with superficial display
- Ellen's house is in bohemian sector "it was
certainly a strange quarter to have settled
in"- associated with foreigners , these
artists are free. - stands alone as a beacon
of indiculaity in a structured society
- There are many
unwritten rules,
everything is controlled
by a rigid set of rules
that promote
appearance and hide
reality. Everyone goes
through the motions
and present they do not
know what is happening,
gatbsy himself is a big lie
- his books appear to be
real but they are not, its
a facade
- Newland forces a loveless marriage even though it almost kills him, daisy and tom live a
dull life together, they are both incurably dishonest and rather unlikable so it is no surprise
that being lonely in marriage is a better alternative for them. Daisy does allude to being
upset "I woke up... with an unalterable sense of loneliness" but is not strong enough to
ever go against society's expectations. Both authors show for weak characters, isolation
may be apparent but it is better to hide it
- May is "that terrifying product of the
social system he belonged to and believed
in, the young girl who knew nothing and
expected everything"
- but newline discovers that
May will not be tabula rasa on
which he can write his ideal
- Diane Roberts - "he
underestimates May's
knowledge"
- film - May smiles constantly though first scene - she
upholds an appearance of being innocent/ non
threatening but really she is quite vicious, just like the
society that she is in
- LOW
CLASS
- GG - these suffer most. George and Myrtle and
disempowered by their lack of money - Mrytle has a
desperate attempt to gain the "finer things" but has to
endure tom's abuse as a result. She is obsessed with
conspicuous displays like Gatsby but she can never fully
pull this off - "the living room was crowded to the doors
with a set of tapestried furniture entirely too large" the
small room is a metaphor for the confinement of her
social class - she is trapped. George is unable to leave his
current life so has to make himself inferior to tom - he is
sick and ghostly at the end of the novel
- Their story ends in tragedy - it is dangerous to strive
for more than you are given (bleak view of a world
that promotes the upward trajectory of the American
dream) - social climbing is precarious
- Myrtle tries to pass as rich but it gets her killed. George
wilson is contained by his lack of wealth, if he could, he
would have moved and saved their lives
- Killed for reaching too far
- Explored in the AOI through characters and families
that are determined to keep their status of old
money and tradition, this is linked to society and
rules. Old money is associated with trappings and
restrictions - means that newline and ellen cannot
live the life they want. Wharton uses episodes such
as operas/balls/dinners - rigid of chain of events
that always happen.
- In the GG tom shows
hostility towards Gatsby
because he possesses new
money.
- In the GG they possess grace,
taste and subtlety but this is
undermined by their
carelessness and
inconsiderate nature
- Tom and Daisy move to East egg
after moving around "wherever
people played polo and were rich
together" - money provided
protection, they can move easily
- Claire Stocks- as tom is a member of the elite old
money he finds Gatsby's new money a threat
- Even Gatsby is not allowed
access to the upper echelon of
society, he loses everything
trying to get there - shows the
american dream to be a hollow
goal.
- professor Prigozy wrote that he
felt like an outsider throughout
his childhood, for although he
lived among them and socialised
with them, the rich inhabited a
different world.
- MATERIALISM
- Excess represented in red carpet balls vs.
shirts/alcohol/food
- Epigraph of the novel foreshadows; "then
wear the gold hat, if that will move her" -
immediately marks this theme as central,
wealth is the key to love
- The novel optimises 1920s america and the
concerns associated with the era - most
central being money in a culture that was
propelled by unprecedented prosperity and
material excess. 1920s america is no longer
concerned with idealised hope but with
money and possessions
- The sudden rise in the stock market after WW1
led to a sudden, sustained increase in national
wealth and an obsession with materialism. This
coupled with young americas who had fought in
the war becoming increasingly disillusioned led
to the jazz age (as coined by Fitzgerald himself).
to describe a decade of decadence and
prosperity which are right at the heart of
Gatsby's parties.
- American consumer capitalism
exploded and the age of advertising and
mass consumption reshaped the day to
day lives of many americans
- Conspicuous consumption seen in Gatsby -
everything about his wealth is for show and for
the eyes of Daisy - from the "five crates of
oranges and lemons", the "corps" of caterers to
the full orchestra.
- From a marxist perspective it is a place of
excess and indulgence
- Julian Cowley; Products were given brand names, often promoted
as a sign of reliability. Advertising had for a long time been
intended to inform potential buyers what was available for
purchase but new advertising techniques sought to create the
desire for commodities, to shape the taste of the nation rather than
merely reflect it - people measure themselves against materialistic
standards - myrtle buys into this because she thinks it will make
her happy
- 1993 Martin Scorsese's film of AOI - close ups of different jewels and
elaborate displays of food, flower displays - foregrounds excess, excessive
preoccupation with appearance, objects are a sign of your importance
- Michael Duffy - Gatbsy is a consumer, and his
consumption of luxury goods is one of the most
potent displays of his attempt to complete the
assimilation of the american dream
- Capitalism as a cult of individual desires - always
isolating and bound to end in personal isolation.
Isolation as a result of increasing urbanisation of
america itself + political - america looked to europe in
1870s but in the 1920s turned away from it
- Daisy only begins her affair with gatsby after a
display of his wealth - even cries at the expensive
shirts because she's "never seen such beautiful
shirts" before - this is the first time that daisy
actually breaks down, not when she sees gatsby
for the first time
- Stephanie Forward - fitzgerald depicts a society
"dominated by material excess and hollow
relationships"
- Both are interested in
money and what it does to
people. - The world of wealth
triumphs over the main love
plots
- Nick is someone who has had many advantages
- a wealthy family, ivy league college. he is equal
enough to be invited to dinner, his connection
to daisy makes him attractive to gatsby
- Money is the root cause of problems in the novel
- European tradition is evident in the society novels of Edith Wharton and
henry James whose subject matter is relationships with america's
wealthy, globe trotting upper middle class elite; an elite whose status
often depends upon connections to European nobility. The plight of
women become a particular focus in the narratives who indirect style, lack
of sentimentality and almost cynical analysis of the decline of an
american nobility, particularly exposes the vulnerability of unconnected
female members who are shown to be ultimately expendable
- SOCIETY AND
CLASS
- WOMEN
- Gatsby's parties are full of
youthful, beautiful, confident
girls, AOI is policed by etiquette,
here inhibitions are dissolved
- The women are trapped in AOI
because they are in a tribal world
and trapped by the superstitions
that encapsulate the guided age.
In Gatsby, gender roles have
broken down because of
modernism so they won't be as
afraid of strong women
- in wharton's world, women are sexually
innocent and not expected to have
affairs, acknowledge those of their
husbands and not divorce. The only
power they have is that may uses; duty,
loyalty and pregnancy
- Ellen's sin is that she refuses to accept these restrictions
and will not lie about loving Newland
- Unhappily married at an early age to a man 13 years
older. wharton faced like ellen the temptations of
adultery and the censure of divorce
- her "josepine look" marks a sharp contrast to the plunging
necklines covered by lace that american women wore
- Women are expected to act in
society "as innocent wives,
mothers and daughters"
- Diane Roberts - "women of the upper
classes are forced into a kind of
sexlessness, an 'innocence' which restricts
and regulates not only their bodies but
their minds
- a topic about which Wharton felt deeply
after she rebelled against her own old-line
family by getting a divorce and going to live
in france
- Gender roles have changed in GG so there
are different appearances to uphold. Women
have power and freedom to do what they
want, Jordan has found a new freedom but
on the whole they do not take advantage of
this
- "women run around too much these days" - the new woman
- MARRIAGE
- " it was less trouble to conform with the
tradition and treat may exactly as all his
friends treated their wives"
- "there was no use trying to emancipate a
wife who had not the slimmest notion that
she was not free" - women have a certain
role in marriage
- "the word (divorce) had fallen like a bombshell" - the mention of
bomb so close to the war is significant. Shows how dangerous the
society is - military position of New york society
- "our ideas about marriage and divorce are
particularly old fashioned" - "our legislation
favours divorce - out social customs don't"
- SOCIETY
- Society wins in
the end in AOI
and the bad wins
out in GG
- ISOLATION
- - Gatsby and Ellen are the most isolated, Gatsby is
because of his love for Daisy and his self absorption,
although Nick tries to hide this. It means that Ellen can
observe because of her isolation
- Newland and Daisy/Tom show how
there is a difference between being
lonely and alone. Both represent
loveless marriages, Newland says "I am
Dead - I've been dead for months and
months" like Daisy and Tom who
"drifted here and there... and were rich
together"
- Isolation is a result of American class - the
society of AOI reject bohemians/immigrants
whereas Gatsby's isolation is a result of the
American Dream which forces people into
loneliness, its the loneliness of the people of
New York against the dreams of the city and
the rejects like Wilson and the Valley of
ashes
- Gatsby is self-induced because he is so self absorbed with
with reaching his dream of being daisy that he forgets about
reality around him. For him it is a good thing, he is the
embodiment of individualism of the american dream. BUT its
a warning, he becomes so far removed from reality that he
looses all connections. Although nick tries to hide it, we can
still see that loneliness will always be damaging, even to
gatsby
- ‘Gatsby seems alone, despite the hordes of party guests’ - Stephanie Forward
- Ellen is isolated simply because she is
not the typically passive woman of
romantic novels. She has chosen to
physically remove herself in "what was
certainly a strange quarter to have
settled in"
- "these scattered fragments of humanity had never shown a
desire to be amalgamated"
- as a writer herself she faced the criticisms of her class
who disdained and feared what they called the
bohemian life of artists and writers
- The outsiders of the AOI
"had never shown any
desire to be amalgamated
with the social structure".
There is a sense that these
people don't want to be a
part of it, they are ready
for the change of the jazz
age
- Wharton saying that isolation is
necessary because we must
fight against convention but she
appreciates that we need
support because the gatsby era
is far too lonely, there is no
hope left anymore
- Come from society in AOI vs. fitzgerald
believe it to be a result of individualism
- The AOI is about the
totem terrors that ruled
years ago - its a part of
the past, these
members of society are
in fact the isolated ones
which Ned WInsett
point out "you're in a
pitiful minority, you've
got no competition, no
audience"
- There are less, if any unwritten rules in
the GG, theere are ways you are
supposed to act but they are not as strict
as AOI, Tom has an affair with someone
in a lower class. The women in GG say "I
never care what i do, so I always have a
good time"
- Zelda saw herself as the new
woman - the flapper. Of course
Scott's work was interrupted
by the incessant party going,
they soon began to quarrel, for
their life together lacked any
semblance of order
- The closing decades of the 19th and early 20th century
gave rise to a unique social phenomenon - the new woman.
The increase in educated and independent women who
sought fulfilment beyond the bounds of marriage and
motherhood, against those traditional female roles that
amounted to a kind of gender enslavement. for others it
was a disturbing and socially divisive construct that went
against nature
- The Great Gatsby “suggests that a woman
has no identity except in the eyes of her
beholder.” - Rena Sanderson
- Rena Sanderson - the truth is that Fitzgerald was ambivalent,
both fascinated and disturbed by women and by the changing
distribution of power between the sexes
- it is a phallocentric novel - male dominated, none of the women work, have no
meaningful purpose. hegemonic - women police themselves and reinforce
patrichal values - daisy kills myrtle for reaching beyond her status - symbolic
destruction of the woman as a broken body. gatsby's obsession with idealised
version of daisy does not help women achieve liberation.
- There is recklessness in GG,
characters do not conform to
the same old fashioned
traditions but there are still
unspoken rules
- EAST EGG
- Daisy doesn't have a good time at Gatsby's party - she
hates west egg because there is no etiquette -
everyone is drunk and has no sophistication.
Everything is described in east egg cinematically and
moving - Nick is in a different world of wealth, it is not
normal. Until the characters open their mouths, the
world is decedent, then the ugliness spills out - they
are petty, ordinary, mean and stupid
- Wharton was often critical of the rigidity of the social
code but she saw its purpose of handing down values
and replicating culture. The new york society rigidly
enforces the social code. Until the van der Luydens
come to her rescue, society refuses to welcome Ellen
because she is woman who has left her husband.
- Theres an understood social code, Mrs
Archer says "boys will be boys" - men
are expected to have affairs, whilst
women are expected to be faithful
- "i didn't think the mingnotts would
have tried it on" - the actions of an
individual reflect upon the whole
society - "the... embarrassed gaze of her
family"
- Men too have restrictions - the only acceptable vocation for Newline is the
law, he must not dirty his hands in business or trade
- "when such things happened it
was undoubtedly foolish of the
man but somehow always
criminal of the woman" - double
standards
- The eyes of society are everywhere,
when Newland is out for a walk and
sees Ellen he worries about the
eyes of Lefferts and Chivers
- Newland's stagnant lifestyle - "the other conventions on which his
life was moulded" - the language shows how boring this life can be
where no one acts differently - its a stultifying environment.
- The times are changing in both -
AOI foreshadows the GG era
and GG foreshadows the great
depression
- Becoming a thing of that past -
New Winsett points out how
they have "no audience"
- Wharton was herself born into
the claustrophobic world of Old
New York
- when she wrote she had witnessed an
astounding amount of social change, both
horrified and fascinated by the chaos and
freedom of the the new century as it headed
towards modernism and war, Wharton was
prompted to compare this new age with that
of her own past
- The AOI then stands as both a personal recollection of
the culture of wharton's youth and a historical study of
an old-fashioned world on the brink of profound and
permanent change
- Dale Bauer - appearing in 1920 the year that saw a great
wave of anti-foreign incidents culminating in the
second wave of the KKK and the anti- immigrantion act
of 1924. the reference to the bohemian in this novel is
not to the artistic world of the 1920s but to the influx of
bohemian immigrants of the 1870s
- Cynthia Griffin - the novel is "a look back
along the past to examine the constraints
that had bewildered her own impatient
youth"
- In the end "the young men nowadays were emancipating themselves from the law and business
and taking up all sorts of new things" - shows a time of social change and conventions - wharton
suggests we shouldn't conform - otherwise we are weak
- "archer got up
slowly and walked
back alone to his
hotel" - his social
rooted restraints
are too instilled in
him to break
- From wharton's 1920 vantage point
there were things never imagined in
1870 - automobiles, airplanes,
telephones, electricity, women had
just won vote after 70 years of
struggle, world war. The quaint
realm of upper crust new york
society would have seemed a long
ago dream
- cynthia griffin - Wharton noticed that the
world she depicts was caught up in a process
of inevitable change. new families were
invading the realm of new york.
- "they all lived in a
hieroglyphic world where
the real thing was never
said or done" -
encapsualtes the guided
age, it isn't realistic or
accessible
- Set in old new york with a structured gridlock pattern just
like the structured rules and regulations of the new york
society, bohemian sector as completely separate
- The city of whatnot's youth was an isolated island, with no
bridges, only ferries to connect to the outside. No more than
400 elites controlled new york, building colossal mansions
of 5th avenue and rarely venturing to the lower island
district where the poor lived - like the only glimpse of poor is
when they travel in gatsby
- Cynthia Griffin - it was a study of the complex,
intimate relationships between social cohesion
and individual growth.
- Diane Roberts; "the age of
innocence examines the
power of class to warp and
destroy lives"- just like this
literally happens in Gatsby
- AOI transports the reader to new york during 1870s - period called
gilded age when social classes in NY became increasingly stratified.
in the 1880s 'the four hundred' was devised, a list of a carefully
selected group of cooer class families. money mattered but the way
a family made its fortune and how long they had possessed it
counted most of all - unlike Gatsby.
- Wharton acclimatises the reader to
the societies fashions which are only
concerned with appearances
- members of the audience scrutinise each other more
than the opera itself, going to the opera becomes a
stage to see and to be seen
- The events are monotonous and predictable, everyone arrives
late because "it was 'not the thing' to arrive early"
- It takes the entrance of Ellen - someone completely different and not confined by society
to spark energy into the text "well upon my soul!" explained Lawrence lefts
- Ellen .. ‘dresses to suit herself, not New
York’ - Glyn Austen. "Ellen is as
unconventional as her room" - Cathy
Tayloe
- "in conformity with
the old new york
tradition" - " the way
of people who
dreaded scandal more
than disease, who
placed decency above
courage"
- They always have
monontous tridents - a
way of excluding those
who aren't in the know
- its a tribal instinct to
ostracise and reject
those on the outside -
reflects a sense of
insecurity
- Cynthia Griffin says AOI is "a
glance back along the past to
examine the constraints the
had bewildered her own
impatient youth". Just like
Fitzgerald, Professor ruth
Prigozy "he felt like an outsider
throughout his childhood, for
although he lived among them
and socialised with them, the
rich inhabited a different
world"
- MORALITY
- NARRATOR
- AOI - 3rd person limited omniscient. Free indirect
speech so the thoughts of the character slip in. We
see the world through newline's eyes - ironically he
sees himself as a cosmopolitan but Wharton belies
this sentiment by describing his acceptance of the
opera - he wears a gardenia, the socially acceptable
flower, he screams conformity
- Belinda Jack says Newland sees everything at surface value, he is
presumptuous and irritating at the beginning - he subscribes to
convention, this is shattered when he questions convention and
begins to look for happiness, Ellen shows him another possibility
- At the beginning "he was content to hold
this view without analysing it" but he
develops a thoughtfulness, the catalyst
for which is Ellen
- "he was at heart a dilettante
and thinking over a pleasure
to come often gave him a
subtler satisfaction that its
realisation"
- Unreliable narrative perspective -
he doesn't truly understand May
- ‘Not only is Newland’s perspective
subjective but he has the capacity to be
simply wrong’ - Fiona Macdonald
- Cynthia Griffin - a wary
reader must be mindful of the
severe limitations of the
romantic self-serving,
visionary tendencies that
becloud Newland's
perceptions of the world.
- he is a man of imagination rather
than action - Koss and
Cunningham
- "something he knew he has missed: the
flower of life" - freedom and
oppoutunity - he never picks the flower
or the opportunity.
- Scorsese's film - opening credits
show a lace flower - it is not real, the
freedom for these characters will
never be real
- He wears the same white flower as
everyone else - screams conformity
- In Gounod's 'Faust' - a respected man is search of
power, knowledge and youth sells his soul to the devil
yet is somewhat redeemed through the love of a good
woman. In AOI an equally respected man resists
temptation but ends up in unsatisfying marriage -
ultimately all the enticement, passion and regret in the
fast sorry helps prepare the reader
- Cynthia Griffn - Newline may be
capable of improvement, of growth -
even of achieving wisdom and
contentment. however, he will never
be capable of some fundamental
transformation
- STYLE
- Both conclude in an elegiac
mood, Wharton sees the 1870s
from vantage point of 1900s as
being an era of great order,
structured, less extravagant,
charm and less vulgarity. It is
locked safely in the past but this
nostalgia is qualified by
wharton's judgement of the
period as emotionally
suffocating and stifling.
- The elegiac feeling in Fitzgerald's stems
from his identification of Gatsby's
experience with the promise and hope of
america, as contrasted to the
metriciousness of the present. In the GG
the past is large, gorgeous and redolent
with grand promise. It is too late however
to achieve this goal, although we still have
it in our dreams its unattainability is
necessary for its status as a romantic ideal
- Wharton is
ambivalent about the
loss of comforting
tradition - she
laments yet satirises
it
- WW1 = upheaval of established
values, economic boom,
capitalism, promotes individual
to looks after themselves. Looks
back to a time when there were
clearer boundaries, not
everyone could make it
- Cynithia Griffin - a post war novel, set in the
1870s but designed to discover those cultural
strengths that might enable america to survive the
postwar years of the 1920s
- Uses modernism but fuses with romanticism. Romanticism is an emotional
directness of personal experience and the boundlessness of individual
imagination and aspiration. Modernism is a rejection of 19th century
traditions, adopted complex and difficult new forms and styles. T.S. Elliot
replaced logical exposition of thoughts with collages of fragmentary images
and illusions, the accepted continuity of chronological continuity was upset
- AOI - Jumps forward at
the end - very
modernist approach.
Elements of the old
(chronological story)
and the modern -
represents division
between past and
present america
- WINNERS
- HYPOCRISY
- Ellen realises the hypocrisy of New
Yorkers from her first glimpse of
them, she tells newland that they do
not want to hear the truth, they
would rather pretend.
- May throws a lavish going away dinner for
Ellen but under the surface it is a triumph
because of May's position as wife
- May must pretend she does not know newline is in
love with ellen but from her death bed confession
we see she has lived with this knowledge all her life
- Society meant to be based on nobility and
etiquette but obsessed with gossip
- those who find loopholes
in the code are despised
but are still tolerated -
lefferts has numerous
affairs but still extolles
xian values and snubs
ellen for leaving her
husband
- Archer's new look tolerated hypocrisy in private
relations; but in business matters it exacted a
limpid and impeccable honesty" - new york society
is really just materialistic, the real god is money
and bankruptcy is a sin, to show off money is to be
successful
- In marriage - "with a shiver of
foreboding he saw his marriage
becoming what most of the other
marriages about him were - a dull
assoitiation of material and social
interests held together by ignorance
on the one side and hypocrisy on the
other
- May and Tom win - Tom wins crudely
whereas May plays a deeper game,
seemingly as sweet and naive but at a
crucial moment announces her
pregnancy. May is manipulative and
cunning whereas Daisy is passive by
contrast.
- Tom and Daisy are not punished, they can just
retreat "back into their money", allows them to
behave recklessly whilst others die in the pursuit
of their dreams
- Daisy and Tom are "careless
people" and instigate a large
amount of tragedy due to their
own recklessness - money
becomes a shield against
responsibility
- Fitzgerald is voicing a concern between the
disparity between the rich and the poor
- The characters that have money
believe that it equates with happiness
- Tom and Daisy have old money so do
not need the american dream to
elevate them because they are steeped
in tradition
- But Fitzgerald implies that money does not
bring about happiness, even they do not live
a completely fulfilled life
- The lives of Tom and Daisy seem to be filled
with boredom and no purpose they "drift here
and there... and were rich together"
- Described as having etiquette such as women
who "were both in white and their dresses
were rippling and fluttering" - exotic and
different world of wealth that is simply not
normal
- Darren Morton notes how whiteness is
associated with the exclusive and indestructible
world of the rich
- GG - the gaps, silences,
inconsistencies and
contradictions are a result
of modernism - they felt
coherence was a fallacy
- modernist writers shied away from the
conventions of chronology, point of view and
coherence. Much of modern society - moral
values, gender roles seemed to have
splintered apart and modern art in some
ways represented this fragmentation
- Nick
- autodiagetic narrator - involved in the story
itself but we do not get the distance of an
omniscient narrator. He says the reader can
trust him because "I'm inclined to reserve all
judgements"
- Nick rubs out the chalk word at the end - "i
erased it" - he is an editor of the most intrusive
type
- "now i want to go back a little" - he controls the release of info - he has a
central role in the story, he doesn't just tell it but creates gatsby as a symbol of
hope. Gatsby is outside of his disgust and recoil from the east, gatsby is shown
to be a success
- He feels both 'Within and without" - he is a contradiction
"simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible
variety of life" - nicholas tredell says this is his narrative stance
throughout - he modifies the 1st person narrative to include
stories and events which Nick had no participation in
- Clearly seen in Jordan's flashback when she recalls "one october day in 1917" -
this is entirely her account
- He himself admits that he concentrates on captivating
episodes "I have given the impression that the events of
these three nights... were all that absorbed me" - makes the
narration seem unreliable because we have to depend upon
other charcaters and "she was incurably dishonest"
- his unreliability doesnt stem from a desire to be
untruthful, but from a lack of self-knowledge and
awareness. john mullen would say he is "inadequate"
not unreliable.
- He imagines guests hiding - he is always imagining
things, JUST LIKE NEWLAND, even when things
are not there "i think he" "as though in" "i suppose
he smiled"
- But then he spends the remainder of the novel
forming judgments - daisy is shallow, tom crude,
Jordan dishonest, myrtle sensual 'there was
something gorgeous about him" "i disapproved of
him from beginning to end"
- Characterises himself as highly moral and highly
tolerant but Gatsby stands out as an exception, he
admires him highly although he represents
everything that Nick scorns about new york - he
poses a challenge to Nick's customary ways of
thinking and embodies an ability to dream and
escape the past, it was an untouchable dream - he
would never reach it
- But there's a discrepancy between his principles
and his practice - he succumbs to judgement - he
appears spinless when he cannot truly decide how
he feels
- He accepts Gatsby's wrongdoings but disapproves of
Jordan's cheating. He becomes acclimtised to the east,
forgets his middle western values in order to take
advantage of the excitement of his surroundings - he
knows jordan is dishonest, selfish and cynical but he is
still attracted to her vitality
- ‘Nick wants Gatsby to be ‘Great’ and doesn’t
want to expose him even though he knows he is
lying’ (unreliable narrator) - Claire Stocks
- SATIRISING/SOCIETY
- Wharton undercuts Newland's
opinons to expose hypocirsy of
the social code - tongue and
cheek tone - statical towards
the society. She writes about
old new york where rules of
society have changed, looks
back in a critical manner, she is
torn. Critical and ironic in tone
- Gatsby's world is a
very shallow one,
Gatsby has real
fake books - he
puts effort into
being fake.
- Diane Roberts - "the age of
innocence is about the
absurdity and naivety of the
way americans see
themselves as virtuous,
uncomplicated and
democratic.
- film - narration from the voice of
Wharton - dry, faintly mocking
voice quoting Wharton directly, as
Diane Roberts says; "constantly
reminding us that this is a world
where artifice is not only preferred
but essential"
- Rob Worrall - Wharton as a writer whose narrative voice is
closer to that of a satirist, it is both retrospective and
prospective
- Duty is carrying on in the
face of adversity,
Newland's commitment to
may after she reveals she
is pregnant is a duty
understood, his promise
to stay in a boring
marriage is in the end
what makes civilisation
work
- Order is optimised by the
repetition of certain rituals.
Newline's wife must be
sexually innocent, we lear that
she knew all along about his
affairs/ passions for Ellen but
she followed the accepted
code of ignorance
- Loyalty is a virtue among families,
marriages and men. Newline must go to
the Mingnott box to show his family
loyalty when ellen arrives. Lawrence
Lefferts asked newline to "cover" for him
and lie to give him an alibi so that he can
carry on an affair
- "their long years together had
shown him that it did not so much
matter if marriage was a dull duty,
as long as it kept the dignity of duty"
- May embodies "the steadying
sense of an inescapable duty"
- "a wife who had
not the dimmest
notion that she was
not free"
- "You're worth the whole damn bunch put
together" - worth refers to the old money part of
society - even though they are in possession of
money they did not earn or deserve it; morality
is more important than obtaining money
- For Myrtle infidelity is not an issue, her affair gives
her access to money and power so therefore it is
justified
- it was other people, not Gatsby, that was the problem - the
'foul dust" - he stands out because he is pure, everything
else is tainted, there's a tension between gatsby and the
world that surrounds him
- Gatsby; it is a novel without a moral
centre because they do not know
what is moral in the 1920s -
everything is changing
- Nick Lacks commitment to a place,
a woman, a job, set of moral values
because of the war = a collapse of
culture and tradition - suggests
that the pose way period was
lacking social responsibility
- Diane Roberts - AOI "succeeds not because it
shows how people used to be 'back then' but
because it speaks to how we evade our
feelings and compromise our desires still
today"
- essetnial to appear in right way -
behaviour is similar in 1920s - fake
aspirations/dreams/illusions