Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Understanding The Great Gatsby
View through CrossRef
Today, more than 70 years after its publication,The Great Gatsbyseems as fresh and pertinent to American life as it did in the 1920s. The social, cultural, and historical milieu of the 1920s reflected in its pages is not so very different from our own. This interdisciplinary collection of commentary and rich collateral materials will enrich the reader's understanding of those times and their influence on Fitzgerald's novel. The authors have included a wide variety of primary documents that capture the flavor of the era and its notorious and flamboyant players. Included are newspaper stories, first person accounts, and congressional testimony from the scandals of the 1920s.
Most of the documents included in this text are available in no other printed form. A chapter on the writing of the novel illuminates Fitzgerald's relationship to the literature of the 1920s. Chapters discuss the following topics: the scandals of the 1920s, The Woman Question, the rich in the 1920s, and the novel then and now. Each section of the casebook contains study questions, topics for research papers and class discussion, and lists of further reading for examining the themes and issues raised by the novel. This is the ideal student and teacher companion for understanding the novel in its historical, social and cultural context.
Title: Understanding The Great Gatsby
Description:
Today, more than 70 years after its publication,The Great Gatsbyseems as fresh and pertinent to American life as it did in the 1920s.
The social, cultural, and historical milieu of the 1920s reflected in its pages is not so very different from our own.
This interdisciplinary collection of commentary and rich collateral materials will enrich the reader's understanding of those times and their influence on Fitzgerald's novel.
The authors have included a wide variety of primary documents that capture the flavor of the era and its notorious and flamboyant players.
Included are newspaper stories, first person accounts, and congressional testimony from the scandals of the 1920s.
Most of the documents included in this text are available in no other printed form.
A chapter on the writing of the novel illuminates Fitzgerald's relationship to the literature of the 1920s.
Chapters discuss the following topics: the scandals of the 1920s, The Woman Question, the rich in the 1920s, and the novel then and now.
Each section of the casebook contains study questions, topics for research papers and class discussion, and lists of further reading for examining the themes and issues raised by the novel.
This is the ideal student and teacher companion for understanding the novel in its historical, social and cultural context.
Related Results
Understanding Scientific Understanding
Understanding Scientific Understanding
This book is about scientific understanding. It is widely acknowledged that a central aim of science is to achieve understanding of the world around us, and that possessing such un...
Theatre Across Borders
Theatre Across Borders
Is there a fundamental connection between New York's Elevator Repair Service's 9-hour production of The Great Gatsby and a Kathakali performance?
How can we come to appre...
Understanding Deleuze, Understanding Modernism
Understanding Deleuze, Understanding Modernism
Understanding Deleuze, Understanding Modernism explores the multi-faceted and formative impact of Gilles Deleuze on the development and our understanding of modernist thought in it...
The History of Great Britain
The History of Great Britain
This addition to The Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations provides an updated, clear, and concise history of Great Britain that will be of value to undergraduates and to a gen...
The Great Society and the War on Poverty
The Great Society and the War on Poverty
An ideal resource for students as well as general readers, this book comprehensively examines the Great Society era and identifies the effects of its legacy to the present day.
...
Understanding and the Aims of Science
Understanding and the Aims of Science
Philosophers of science have long believed that understanding, contrary to explanation, is a philosophically irrelevant notion. On Carl Hempel’s influential view, understanding is ...
Introduction
Introduction
This chapter introduces the theme of the book: scientific understanding. Science is arguably the most successful product of the human desire for understanding. Reflection on the na...


