FITZGERALD, F. Scott (1896-1940)
The importance of F. Scott
Fitzgerald's major contributions to the development of the novel were blurred
during his lifetime by contemporary images of him as historian of the Jazz
Age, as creator of the American flapper, and as popular author of more
than 150 short stories, many of them about young love for the Saturday
Evening Post, the mouthpiece of middle America in the 1920's and 1930's.
While it would be a mistake to discount the importance of Fitzgerald's
role as social historian, it has become increasingly clear to critics and
literary historians in the half century since Fitzgerald's death, as it
was indeed clear to a few serious artists and literary critics such as
T.S. Eliot and H.L. Mencken during his lifetime, that his artistic contributions
to American letters, particularly to the novel form, place him alongside
such other immortals as Nathaniel Hawthorne and Henry James, two authors
whom, along with Edith Wharton and for very different reasons, he perhaps
most closely resembles.
Fitzgerald's reputation as a novelist, as one observer has noted, results
from "the hard core of morality" in his work and from his offering "a fiction
that is hard to imitate but from which much can be learned." Fitzgerald's
experiments with form led him from the novel of saturation in the case
of his first novel,
This Side of Paradise (1920), to the Jamesian
and Conradian novel of selected incident in his later work, as he attempted
to create believable heroes who embody the best of the genteel chivalric
tradition and yet who, as inhabitants of the modern age when gods are dead
and faiths are shaken, also embrace the existential quest.
Amory Blaine, the main character in This Side of Paradise, resembles
the heroes of what he refers to as biographical "quest" books and is, in
fact, a thinly disguised Fitzgerald persona. He is sent from Minneapolis
(Fitzgerald's hometown) to an eastern boarding school, St. Regis (Fitzgerald's
was the Newman School); and then he goes to Princeton (the university that
Fitzgerald attended), learning there mostly from his own reading, until
he goes out into the world ill-prepared to earn a living but with some
definite, if impractical, notions about how life should be lived. In its
adherence to the conventions of the Bildungsroman genre This
Side of Paradise is not on its surface a particularly innovative novel,
though it was considered experimental in its time because Fitzgerald included
in it poetry and a play. Its importance in Fitzgerald's development as
a novelist results from the novel's fusion of two kinds of quests: Amory
Blaine is, on the one hand, a genteel, chivalric hero, entitled by birth
and surrounded everywhere by affluence and grace. By the end of the novel,
however, the romantic qualities of his quest are tempered by an existential
conclusion: "I know myself...but that is all," Amory cries in the novel's
final sentence. In addition, Fitzgerald objectifies Amory's quest by associating
his personal dilemma with that of an entire generation: his was a new generation,
"grown up to find all Gods dead, all wars fought, all faiths in man shaken."
This association made This Side of Paradise a cult novel to members
of the generation which was coming of age at the beginning of the Roaring
Twenties, and it prompted contemporary critics to see Fitzgerald as a novelist
with promise.
In the two years separating the publication of his first novel and his
second, The Beautiful and Damned (1922), Fitzgerald's goals as an
artist were undermined by the literary marketplace of the early 1920's,
and his second novel represents, at best, minor progress toward the creation
of his masterpiece, The Great Gatsby (1925). In an attempt to align
himself with what he considered serious literary theory, as opposed to
the popular taste that dictated high prices for his frothy stories about
flappers and young love, Fitzgerald experimented during the time of composition
of The Beautiful and Damned with literary naturalism. Though his
flirtation with naturalism led to a distinguished novelette, "May Day,"
his attempts to communicate what Mencken called "the meaninglessness of
life" philosophy through Anthony Patch and his wife Gloria, whose obsessive
pursuit of money leads him to the breaking point and leaves her with an
invalid for a husband and a marriage without promise even when they finally
inherit Anthony's grandfather's money, is not convincing. In spite of the
novel's weakness, Fitzgerald advances toward what would become his trademark
themes in The Beautiful and Damned, focussing especially on the
destructive effects of materialism evident in the fate of Anthony Patch.
He was also experimenting in his second novel with aesthetic distance,
drawing as he does on his premonition of disaster, both in his own life
and in his marriage to Zelda, and attempting to objectify it through a
heavily plotted, imagined story. Contemporary reviewers were characteristically
unimpressed, criticizing the novel's deterministic message and lamenting
the fact that it was not a sequel to
This Side of Paradise.
Much discussion has centered on the means by which Fitzgerald, in the three
years between the publication of The Beautiful and Damned and 1925
made the artistic leap necessary for the creation of his finest novel,
The
Great Gatsby. Fitzgerald himself partially credited his technical experimentation
with point of view to his having read Joseph Conrad's preface to The
Nigger of the Narcissus and the evolution in his thinking about western
civilization to his exposure to Oswald Spengler's The Decline of the
West. Whatever the case, Fitzgerald brought his search for a
believable hero for the twentieth century and his technical mastery of
the craft of fiction to a new plateau with The Great Gatsby. In
a relatively short novel of nine chapters, Fitzgerald tells the magical
story of Jay Gatsby's quest for the rich and shallow Daisy Buchanan in
such a way that it also becomes a credible story, not only of the emptiness
of the materialistic American Dream, but also of the ideal quest for truth
and beauty. Through the first-person narrator, Nick Carraway, who can both
participate in Gatsby's dream of
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having Daisy's love and criticize
it, Fitzgerald establishes distance from material about which he felt passionately,
based loosely as it was on Fitzgerald's rejection by the wealthy Chicago
debutante, Ginevra King. Though it is Gatsby who is at least superficially
the hero of The Great Gatsby, ultimately it is Nick who absorbs
the truth of Gatsby's story: that the ability to dream is perhaps the highest
end of man, but that "the foul dust that floats in the wake" of the dream,
the compromise required by materialism, threatens to destroy the romantic
vision.
If The Great Gatsby is Fitzgerald's masterpiece, his fourth and
final complete novel, Tender Is the Night (1934), is his most ambitious.
The major asset of Dick Diver, the novel's main character, is his ability
to solve complex problems using psychoanalytic theory, his modern legacy;
his flaw, and as it turns out his legacy from the genteel tradition, is
an excess of charm, which leaves him vulnerable to anyone who would use
him, and ultimately leads him to moral and emotional bankruptcy. For Fitzgerald,
a major challenge in handling Dick Diver's story is the technical one of
making his character flaw credible and his tragic fall inevitable. With
bold experiments in point of view and inversion of chronological sequence,
Fitzgerald tells Dick's story, first from the vantage point of Rosemary
Hoyt, a young movie star who observes him at the pinnacle of his career
and at the height of his charm. Ultimately the novel employs numerous viewpoints
as Fitzgerald carefully constructs the intersecting stories of Dick's wife
Nicole's triumph over mental illness and of Dick's dying fall, which Fitzgerald
eloquently explains with allusions to Conrad in a 1934 letter to H. L.
Mencken. Though some contemporary reviewers saw Tender Is the Night
as a success, the majority found its chronological inversions and viewpoint
shifts confusing.
It was Fitzgerald's plan with The Last Tycoon (1941; published posthumously
as a fragment with the author's notes) to return to a story that more closely
resembled
The Great Gatsby than Tender Is the Night.
It can never be known how fully he would have realized his conception of
the last tycoon, Monroe Stahr, a sensitive, creative Hollywood producer
who, like Jay Gatsby was a poor boy who had become financially successful
and who, like Dick Diver, possessed extraordinary charm. Much of Fitzgerald's
success would have rested on his development of Celia's point of view,
which was to have allowed his narrator, in Fitzgerald's words, "as Conrad
did" to imagine the characters' actions, and would have enabled Fitzgerald
"to get the verisimilitude of a first person narrative, combined with a
Godlike knowledge of all events that happen to my characters." What can
be known with some certainty, however, is that from the beginning of his
career as a novelist through his last notes on The Last Tycoon fragment,
Fitzgerald fully explored the novel form and freely experimented with its
conventions; and finally that he used the novel as the primary vehicle
through which he would attempt to reconcile the legacy of the genteel American
past with the promises and the dangers for the human spirit of an era that
had just begun.
Bryant Mangum
Virginia Commonwealth University
[bibliographical information modified from original]
Bibliography:
Novels by Fitzgerald
This Side of Paradise, 1920
The Beautiful and Damned,
1922
The Great Gatsby, 1925
Tender Is the Night, 1934
The Last Tycoon, 1941; published
as an unfinished novel with the author's notes
Other writings: over 150 short stories; one play, The Vegetable; articles and essays; prose parody, humor, and verse; book reviews; volumes of letters, his ledger, and his notebooks have been published since his death
Bibliographical Sources:
Bruccoli, Matthew J., F. Scott
Fitzgerald: A Descriptive Bibliography, Pittsburg: University of Pittsburg
Press, 1972
Bryer, Jackson R., The Critical
Reputation of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Hamden, Conn: Archon, 1967
Further Reading:
Bruccoli, Matthew J., Some Sort
of Epic Grandeur: The Life of F. Scott Fitzgerald, New York: Harcourt
Brace, Jovanovich, 1981
Eble, Kenneth, F. Scott Fitzgerald,
New York: Twayne, 1963
Lehan, Richard D., F. Scott Fitzgerald's
Craft of Fiction, Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1966
Miller, James E., Jr., F. Scott
Fitzgerald: His Art and Technique, New York: New York University Press,
1964
Mizener, Arthur, The Far Side
of Paradise, Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1951
Sklar, Robert, F. Scott Fitzgerald:
The Last Laocoon, New York: Oxford University Press, 1967