Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Week Two: Love. Wealth and the American Dream

Illustrations from Graphic Novel adaption of
The Great Gatsby by NIcki Greenberg
This week we are reading F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby.  During the first week we looked at L. Frank Baum's attempt to reinvent the epic story for children. We considered the invocation of Oz and the Emerald City in the the post-apocalyptic tale of The Hunger Games. In his classic novel Fitzgerald takes on the fairy story of the American Dream and the myth of the self-made man. Against the background of 1920s wealth and excess we have a novel in which the plot and its invention take second place to the consciousness and sensitivity of the narrator and assumed author. One of the pleasures of this text is to assemble the perspective of the narrator on the events he recounts and, by extension, the narrator's take on the attitudes and values of his times.


Another aspect to consider is the role technology plays in the novel. What relatively new technologies and technology environments play important roles in the text?

What about the assumed relationships between men and women in the novel. What is the picture of romance that is presented in the novel?

In our turn, we have mythologized Fitzgerald's time and his circles, a nostalgia that is on display and critiqued in Woody Allen's Midnight in Paris which is one of this week's recommended films.  I am asking you to watch Whit Stillman's The Last Days of Disco as this week's required film. How much changes, how much appears to stay the same between the eras as portrayed in The Great Gatsby and The Last Days of Discso.

The assignment for this week is to read the novel, then write a 350 - 500 wd. blog post on why one might consider The Great Gatsby a literary work.

Check out these web comic strips about The Great Gatsby by Kate Beaton:

http://www.harkavagrant.com/?id=259


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