Total Pageviews

Saturday 21 May 2011

LITB1 - ASPECTS OF NARRATIVE - 'THE GREAT GATSBY'

To continue with what is needed for AO3 - Explore connections . . .informed by interpretations of other readers. Then here are a few more quotations that you might find useful

'Great is irony.  Gatsby is a rich nobody'  -  Dexter

'Gatsby's dream is the American Dream'  -  Pelzer

'It is a dream corrupted by money and betrayed by carelessness'  -  Pelzer.

'Buchanans representing and embodying . . .self-pleasure and hypocritical materialism'  -  Tanner.

'Hypothesising, Speculating, Imagining' (Nick's narration)  -  Tanner 

'The reality is that such dreams are inevitably elusive'  -  Tredell. 

'Daisy play(s) certain roles ...as a way of coping with the pressure of the outside world'  - Resneck

'Sense doom in Gatsby because Fitzgerald sensed doom in himself'  -  Styron. 

Fitzgerald deemed the 1920s the 'greatest, gaudiest spree in history'.



 If you are thinking of writing on 'The Great Gatsby' for the Section A question, then for the part 1 of that question you will be marked on AO2 - Structure, Form and Language (check out an earlier blog for more details).

Structure: Fitzgerald uses Nick as a framing device to bring the novel together.  The first pages introduce him and the last chapter is concerned with what happened to him after Gatsby was killed.  It is Nick who chooses what to include in his book and tells us what he remembers of what the other people involved told him as events unfolded.

Jordan Baker tells what information she has about Gatsby and Daisy's former relationship, apparently in her own words.   Fitzgerald, in parenthesis, says that she was 'sitting up very straight on a straight chair' which conveys the impression that her words will be factual and truthful, not gilded by her imagination.  This technique makes Jordan Baker seem a believable witness but not Daisy, we are unclear what she thinks and feels.  Fitzgerald wrote in a letter that:  'The worst fault in [TGG] I think is a BIG FAULT: I gave no account (and had no feeling about or knowledge of) the emotional relations between Gatsby and Daisy from the time of their reunion to the catastrophe.'

However, when Gatsby gives his version of events, Nick takes over and puts all that is said in his own words.  Gatsby's language is child-like, revealing his lack of education and immaturity.  Anne Crow argues that if Fitzgerald had allowed Gatsby to be the narrator, his style would have made for a very dull and commonplace novel, rendering the title wildly inappropriate.

Also look at how Fitzgerald condenses information, the story covers only 4 months, but seems over a much longer period because of Fitzgerald's narratorial technique of having Nick informed of past events by the other characters who were involved.  It is a non-linear narrative structure and by looking at the 60 Second re-cap video clips: http://www.60secondrecap.com/library/great-gatsby/   
 then you will see how Fitzgerald uses the seasons and the weather to structure the novel.









2 comments:

  1. More Gatsby would be v useful - welcome back!!

    ReplyDelete
  2. These criticisms are really helpful but just wondering where you got these from - what is the source? Thank you!

    ReplyDelete