Monday, September 30, 2019

The Great Gatsby

The Great Gatsby


F. Scott Fitzgerald's use of vehicles in The Great Gatsby constitutes more than just a symbolic motif: cars, trains, boats, and other means of transportation structure the plot, providing the narrative with motive force and mobility. Characters are brought together and torn apart through changes to the scenario, when vehicles actually start and stop. The characters' ephemeral relationships start with their riding in the same vehicle, and end—or are brought back to reality—when the vehicle comes to a halt. Within this structure, the novel's central motif, the “green light,” acts as a traffic signal, giving Gatsby the go-ahead to move onward to create the short-lived world founded upon his belief in mobility. Appropriately, the appearance of Gatsby's natural father following the final crash, a symbolic accident denoting the end of his dream, indicates what Gatsby had essentially tried to “move” all along: his unchangeable breeding and past. This article taps into the possibility of reevaluating time and breeding—the conventional themes in Fitzgerald's novel—from the perspective of literal vehicle mobility, which provides important structure to Nick's narrative.


Gatsby's Green Light as a Traffic Signal: F. Scott Fitzgerald's Motive Force

Yasuhiro Takeuchi
The F. Scott Fitzgerald Review
Vol. 14, No. 1 (2016), pp. 198-214
DOI: 10.5325/fscotfitzrevi.14.1.0198

https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/fscotfitzrevi.14.1.0198



Themes
  • I do not want what I already Have
  • East vs West 
  • The rich are Different...
  • Can’t live in the Past?…Of course you can.
  • American dream? It’s a lie.
  • What’ll we do with ourselves this afternoon?  And the day after that, and the next thirty years?

    Motifs:
    •  Car Crashes
    •  The green light
    •  Light
    •  The Valley of Ashes and the 'Eyes' 
    •  Alcohol  
    • Weather 
    • Colour
    • Vehicles


    Important Characters:
    • Nick- a reliable/unreliable narrative voice, judgmental
    • Daisy- unreliable in almost every way
    • Jordan- reliably self-centered
    • George Wilson- Reliable in every way; dull, dull, dull
    • Myrtle Wilson-unreliable
    • Tom- Reliably, predictably, a self-centered bully
    • Meyer Wolfsheim- utterly reliable (he knows a guy)
    • Gatsby- Who am I?



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