Gatsby Theories And Critics Flashcards
Tyson
A scathing critique of American capitalist culture - The Great Depression, The Great bloom, prohibition etc
Sarah Beede Fryer
She does feel, she has suffered and her desire for her daughter to be a fool is actually a desire to shelter her from experiencing the pain that Daisy herself has experienced
Anne O’Neill
Nick, like Gatsby, is an outsider, an étranger among the wealthy of Long Island
Kathleen Parkinson
Gatsby is a divided personality, ambivalent even in his death
Ian and Michelle McMechan
Jordan is not an angel. Ultimately her apparent lack of care for others might make us grow to distrust her at least
McMechan
It is difficult to distinguish whether the sourness with which she is characterised comes from Nick, her lover Tom Buchanan or Fitzgerald himself
William Rose Bennet (1925)
The queer charm, colour, wonder and drama of a young and reckless world
Tony Tanner
Gatsby’s concern with time - it’s repeatability - is obsessive
Marius Bewley
An emptiness that we see curdling into the viciousness of a monster plus moral indifference as the story unfolds
Edwin Clark (1925)
Fitzgerald discloses in these people a means of spirit, carelessness and absence of loyalties. He cannot hate them, for they are dumb in their selfishness
Claire Stocks (2007)
Nick wants to portray Gatsby as ‘great’ and to ignore or edit anything that might undermine that image
David O’Rourke
Nick is considered to be quite reliable, basically honest and ultimately changed by his contact with Gatsby