THE GREAT GATSBY, by F. Scott
Fitzgerald, 1925
In retrospect it is perhaps not surprising that contemporary reviewers
mainly missed the mark in their appraisals of Fitzgerald's masterpiece,
The
Great Gatsby. His first novel, This Side of Paradise (1920),
a novel of growth, was thinly disguised autobiography written in the third-person,
a viewpoint that numerous reviewers saw as flawed. The Beautiful and
Damned (1922) was marred by a self-conscious preoccupation with the
deterministic philosophy that undergirds American literary naturalism.
By 1925 he was known primarily as the historian of the Jazz Age (which
he named) and chronicler in slick American weeklies and monthlies of the
American flapper (which, in fiction, he invented). His best artistic efforts
had appeared in middlebrow, mass-circulation magazines like The Saturday
Evening Post or had been buried in H.L Mencken's sophisticated but
low-circulation Smart Set before their appearance in two slightly
publicized collections with flashy titles, Flappers and Philosophers(1920)
and Tales of the Jazz Age (1922).
Critics and reviewers were understandably caught off-guard when Fitzgerald
published at the height of the Roaring Twenties a novel which, after its
apotheosis (circa 1950), would, not infrequently, be cited as the Great
American Novel. Typical of the early reviews of The Great Gatsby
was the first, whose spirit is caught in its headline: "F. SCOTT FITZGERALD'S
LATEST DUD." Even Mencken, who noted some of the book's redeeming qualities,
saw it finally as "a glorified anecdote." In the minority was T.S. Eliot,
who was deeply moved by the novel and hailed it as "the first step American
fiction has taken since Henry James," an opinion that has now been echoed
and elaborated upon in scores of books and more than a hundred journal
articles dealing with The Great Gatsby.
Fitzgerald's ambitious goal as he approached the composition of The
Great Gatsby was to "write something new--something extraordinary
and beautiful and simple + intricately patterned." And it is indeed largely
because of his concern with matters of form aimed at simplicity and intricacy
of pattern that the novel succeeds on so many levels: the simplicity, or
apparent simplicity, of Nick Carraway's first-person viewpoint, allows
the reader, on the one hand, to see how the narrative is being constructed
and, on the other, to participate in Nick's sense of discovery as the separate
strands of the narrative take on meaning at various levels of abstraction
in such a way that they seem, both to Nick and to the reader, to have been
inseparably linked from the beginning. There was, of course, nothing new
about first-person narration in the 1920's. It had a long history in the
English novel dating back to the mid-18th century. In America, two distinguished
first-person narratives, Herman Melville's Moby-Dick and Mark Twain's
The
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, preceded The Great Gatsby, as
did scores of first-person narratives by Edgar Allan Poe. But Fitzgerald,
who was reading and studying Joseph Conrad during the composition of The
Great Gatsby, was interested in exploring subtle uses of narrative
viewpoint. On the novel's most superficial level, that of Jay Gatsby's
all-consuming love and pursuit of Daisy Buchanan, Nick, in service of Fitzgerald's
goal of simplicity, becomes a logical choice as narrator. His physical
proximity to the main characters and his trustworthiness situate him ideally
to serve as a kind of Jamesian confidant on several fronts, one who can,
in fact, know details of the story from many points of view and observe
much of the action firsthand.
Obviously, the creation of a reliable narrator of the Gatsby-Daisy story
at the heart of The Great Gatsby was central in Fitzgerald's achieving
verisimilitude. However, the simple love story was merely the foundation
for a narrative structure that would accommodate Fitzgerald's ideas about
irreconcilable contradictions within the American Dream and ultimately
about the ideal quest itself. Young Jay Gatsby, through the discipline
of Benjamin Franklin-like charts and schedules, has prepared himself to
receive all that America has to offer and believes naively that he can
have the embodiment of it, the wealthy Louisville debutante Daisy Fay,
the only "nice" girl he has ever known, if he can but find the currency
to buy his way into her life. It is Nick, the middle-class everyman without
particular allegiance to either the privileged or working class, who has
enough objectivity to comprehend the awful irony that Gatsby's dream has
been futile from the beginning: he will never be accepted into the world
of old money that Daisy could never leave. At this level the love story
approaches allegory, and because Nick, like all of the main characters
in the novel, is a Westerner, he is credible as narrator of the allegory,
which he calls "a story of the West, after all." He knows about the infinite
hope of the frontier spirit, and he also has witnessed the corruption of
the American promise of equality for all.
On the second level, therefore, Fitzgerald transcends the novel of Jazz-Age,
bull-market manners that it could have been in the hands of a less ambitious
craftsman, and ascends to the level of the great 19th century French novelists,
who, in Lionel Trilling's words "take the given moment as a moral fact."
But beyond this, Nick's narrative must carry the burden of the novel's
more abstract concern with idealism in the real world. Gatsby "sprang from
his Platonic conception of himself." He creates "the Great Gatsby" from
the raw material of his early self, James Gatz, and from a boundless imagination,
an embodied spirit capable of anything it chooses to do. But when, at last,
Gatsby kissed Daisy and "forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable
breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God." The ideal
world, in Gatsby's case, shatters in the face of the real one. It has,
of course, happened before with Dutch sailors who "for a transitory and
enchanted moment" contemplated the "fresh green breast of the new world."
And, as Nick knows, it will happen as long as there is a human spirit to
contemplate mystery.
The intricate weaving of the various stories within The Great Gatsby
is accomplished through a complex symbolic substructure of the narrative.
The green light, which carries meaning at every level of the story--as
Gatsby's go-ahead sign, as money, as the "green breast of the new world,"
as springtime--is strategically placed in chapters one, five, and nine.
The eyes of T.J. Eckleburg "brood on over the solemn dumping ground," which
is the wasteland that America has become, and their empty gaze is there
at crucial moments such as that of Tom's visit to his mistress in the Valley
of Ashes and before and after her death, a reminder that God has been replaced
by fading signs of American materialism. The sustained good driver/bad
driver
Bryant Mangum
Virginia Commonwealth University
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,
1966
Mizener, Arthur, ed., F. Scott
Fitzgerald: A Collection of Critical Essays, Englewood Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice-Hall, 1963.
Sklar, Robert, F. Scott Fitzgerald:
The Last Laocoon, New York: Oxford University Press, 1967
Stern, Milton R., The Golden
Moment: The Novels of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 1970