Out In The Jazz Age Night- F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
One would have to be rather
pedantic not recognize that F. Scott Fitzgerald was an important novelistic
voice of the Jazz Age in post World War I America. Certainly not the only voice
of that age but the voice which best exemplifies the tensions between the mores
of ‘old wealth’ and the emerging sources of ‘new wealth’ that were produced by
the huge amount of money available, mainly through government contracts as result of the war, or riches gained through
the illegal liquor trade. That is the sociological underpinning that drives
Fitzgerald’s work. This is no better example of those strivings than the Great Gatsby. If nothing else it is a dramatic enactment of
the strivings of the new money to ‘make it’ in the world of high society, one
way or another. And what better way to do that than in the age old tradition of
buying one’s way into that society through marriage. This is the modern
American version of that story.
And the story itself? One Jay
Gatsby, the former Jimmy Ganz, freshly reinventing himself after indeterminate
service in the American military in World War I and loaded with cash from questionable
financial resources, attempts to win, or rather re-win the affections of one
Daisy Buchanan his vision of the perfect life companion and exemplar of the
‘old money’ crowd that he wishes to crash. One little complication, however,
gets in the way. She has found herself married to a brutish but wealthy member
of that ‘old money’ crowd. Gatsby’s fumbling but lavish attempts to lure her
away from the high society of Long Island, then the summer watering hole of the
‘old money’, forms the core of the story. Gatsby’s trial and tribulations on
the way as narrated by Nick Carroway (and Gatsby’s somewhat unwitting
accomplice in the matter) keeps the story line going until the final deadly
ending. The morale- the very rich are indeed very different from you or me.
Moreover, someone else will always have to pick up the messes they have made
for themselves. They merely move on. This
may serve as a cautionary tale for that time and possibly today. Certainly
nobody has chronicled the end of the age of American innocence signaled by the
Jazz Age better than Fitzgerald.
A word on literary merits. According
to the inevitable changes in literary fashion as well as literary politics
Fitzgerald, for long a leading figure in the canon of American literature has
been somewhat eclipsed by other more post-modernist trends. While I firmly
believe that the Western canon is in dire need of expansion to include ‘third
world’, woman and minority voices Fitzgerald’s literary merits stand on their
own. His tightly- crafted story line, his sense of language and the flat-out
fact that that he knew the subject matter that formed the basis of his
expositions merit renewed consideration by today’s reader. Simply put, if you
want to understand part of what was going on in America in the 1920’s before
the Great Crash of 1929 then you simply have to read the man. If nothing else
read the last few pages of Gatsby. If there is a better literary expression of
the promise of America as seem by the early Dutch settlers of New York as the last best hope of civilization and the
failure of that promise at the hands of the ‘robber barons’ and their
descendents I have not read it.
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