Nick Carraway
The Great Gatsby character
Nick Carraway as portrayed by actor Neil Hamilton in The Great Gatsby (1926)
First appearanceThe Great Gatsby (1925)
Created byF. Scott Fitzgerald
Portrayed bySee list
In-universe information
GenderMale
OccupationBond salesman
RelativesDaisy Buchanan (cousin)
OriginAmerican Midwest
NationalityAmerican

Nick Carraway is a fictional character and narrator in F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel The Great Gatsby. The character is a Yale University alumnus from the American Midwest, a World War I veteran, and a newly arrived resident of West Egg on Long Island, near New York City. He is a bond salesman and the neighbor of enigmatic millionaire Jay Gatsby. He facilitates a sexual affair between Gatsby and his second cousin, once removed, Daisy Buchanan which becomes one of the novel's central conflicts. Carraway is easy-going and optimistic, although this latter quality fades as the novel progresses. After witnessing the callous indifference and hedonism of the idle rich during the riotous Jazz Age, he ultimately chooses to leave the eastern United States forever and returns to the Midwest.[1]

The character of Nick Carraway has been analyzed by scholars for nearly a century and has given rise to a number of critical interpretations. According to scholarly consensus, Carraway embodies the pastoral idealism of Fitzgerald.[2] Fitzgerald identifies the Midwest—those "towns beyond the Ohio"—with the perceived virtuousness and rustic simplicity of the American West and as culturally distinct from the decadent values of the eastern United States.[2] Carraway's decision to leave the East evinces a tension between a complex pastoral ideal of a bygone America and the societal transformations caused by industrialization.[3] In this context, Nick's repudiation of the East represents a futile attempt to withdraw into nature.[4] Yet, as Fitzgerald's work shows, any technological demarcation between the eastern and western United States has vanished,[5] and one cannot escape into a pastoral past.[4]

Since the 1970s, scholarship has often focused on Carraway's sexuality.[6][7] In one instance in the novel, Carraway departs an orgy with a feminine man and—following suggestive ellipses—next finds himself standing beside a bed while the man sits between the sheets clad only in his underwear.[8] Such passages have led scholars to describe Nick as possessing a queerness and prompted analyses about his attachment to Gatsby.[9] For these reasons, the novel has been described as an exploration of sexual identity during a historical era typified by the societal transition towards modernity.[10][11]

The character has appeared in various media related to the novel, including stage plays, radio shows, television episodes, and feature films. Actor Ned Wever originated the role of Nick on the stage when he starred in the 1926 Broadway adaptation of Fitzgerald's novel at the Ambassador Theatre in New York City.[12] That same year, screen actor Neil Hamilton played the role in the now lost 1926 silent film adaptation.[13] In subsequent decades, the role has been played by many actors including Macdonald Carey, Lee Bowman, Rod Taylor, Sam Waterston, Paul Rudd, Bryan Dick, Tobey Maguire and others.

Character biography

In my younger and more vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I've been turning over in my mind ever since. "Whenever you feel like criticising any one," he told me, "just remember that all the people in this world haven't had the advantages that you've had."

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chapter I, The Great Gatsby[14]

In his narration, Nick Carraway explains that he was born in the Midwestern United States, a region which he describes as "the ragged edge of the universe".[15] The Carraway family owned a hardware business since 1851 and have been a prominent, well-to-do family for generations.[15] Due to his privileged upbringing, Carraway's father cautioned him against passing judgment on individuals who did not enjoy the same advantages.[14] After his matriculation from Yale University in 1915 and the U.S. entry into World War I in 1917, Nick served in the Ninth Machine-Gun Battalion of the 3rd Division.[lower-alpha 1][18][19]

After the Allied Powers signed an armistice with Imperial Germany in 1918, a restless Nick moved from the Midwest to West Egg a wealthy enclave on Long Island, to learn about the bond business.[lower-alpha 2] He lives across the bay from his affluent second cousin, once removed, Daisy Buchanan and her husband Tom Buchanan, formerly Nick's classmate at Yale. They introduce him to their cynical friend Jordan Baker, a masculine golf champion and heiress.[23] Jordan and Nick embark upon an exploratory romance, although Carraway describes his interest in Jordan Baker as not love but "a sort of tender curiosity".[24]

Soon after, Nick's wealthy neighbor Jay Gatsby invites him to one of his lavish soirées, replete with famous guests and hot jazz music. Nick is intrigued by the enigmatic millionaire, especially when Gatsby introduces him to Meyer Wolfsheim, a Jewish gangster who is rumored to have been behind the Black Sox Scandal, the fixing the World Series in 1919 and helped Gatsby make his fortune in the bootlegging business.[25][26] Gatsby confesses to Nick that he has been in love with Daisy since the war and that his extravagant lifestyle is an attempt to win her affections. He asks Nick for his help in seducing her and Nick invites Daisy over to his house without telling her that Gatsby will be there.[27] When Gatsby and Daisy resume their love affair, Nick serves as their confidant.

When I came back from the East last autumn I felt that I wanted the world to be in uniform and at a sort of moral attention forever; I wanted no more riotous excursions with privileged glimpses into the human heart.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chapter I, The Great Gatsby[28]

Several months later, Tom discovers the affair when Daisy addresses Gatsby with unabashed intimacy in front of him. After a confrontation at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, Gatsby and Daisy leave together in his car. Nick later learns that Daisy struck and killed George's wife and Tom's lover, Myrtle Wilson, in Gatsby's car. Tom informs George that Gatsby had been driving the car. George kills Gatsby and then himself. Nick holds a funeral for Gatsby and breaks up with Jordan.[29]

Nick now loathes New York City and decides that Gatsby, Daisy, Tom and he were all Midwesterners unsuited to Eastern life.[30] Nick encounters Tom and initially refuses to shake his hand. Tom admits he told George that Gatsby owned the vehicle that killed Myrtle. Before returning to the Midwest, Nick returns to Gatsby's mansion and stares across the bay at the green light emanating from the end of Daisy's dock.[31]

Creation and conception

Photograph of F. Scott Fitzgerald circa 1921
Photographic portrait of F. Scott Fitzgerald dressed as a woman circa 1915
Photographic portrait of F. Scott Fitzgerald circa 1921, and a photograph of Fitzgerald circa 1917 dressed as a woman. After college, Fitzgerald cross-dressed during outings in Minnesota and flirted with men at social events.[32]

Fitzgerald based the character of Nick Carraway largely upon himself. The author was a young Midwesterner from Minnesota. Like Carraway who went to Yale, Fitzgerald attended Princeton, an Ivy League school.[33] Whereas Nick's father owns a hardware store,[15] Fitzgerald's father owned a furniture store in Minnesota until 1898.[34] Many scholars, including Fitzgerald's close friend Edmund Wilson, posit that Fitzgerald created the character of Nick as an ideal version of himself.[35] His "characters—and himself—are actors in an elfin harlequinade".[35]

Nick's Midwestern viewpoint reflects Fitzgerald's experience. According to his friend Edmund Wilson, Fitzgerald was "as much of the Middle West of large cities and country clubs" as fellow writer Sinclair Lewis was "of the Middle West of the prairies and little towns".[36] Wilson ascribed to Fitzgerald many of the strengths and weaknesses typical of 1920s Midwesterners including a "sensitivity and eagerness for life without a sound base of culture and taste".[36]

Wilson posited that Fitzgerald's Midwestern identity informed much of Carraway's perceptions; in particular, when Fitzgerald "approaches the East, he brings to it the standards of the wealthy West—the preoccupation with display, the love of magnificence and jazz, the vigorous social atmosphere of amiable flappers and youths comparatively unpoisoned as yet by the snobbery of the East".[37]

When creating the literary character of Carraway, Fitzgerald originally named the character Dud.[38] In earlier drafts of the novel,[lower-alpha 3] the character had a previous romance with Daisy Buchanan prior to their reunion on Long Island.[40] Fitzgerald's later rewrites excised any romantic past between Nick and Daisy, as well as added and then deleted a passage implying that Nick departed a job after a male acquaintance amorously pursued him.[41][42] He also changed the viewpoint of an omniscient narrator to Nick's subjective perspective.[42][43] These alterations introduced considerable ambiguity regarding both Nick's reliability as a narrator and his sexuality which became the focus of later scholarship.[43][44]

The ambiguity of Nick's sexuality reflects a similar ambiguity regarding Fitzgerald's own sexuality. During his lifetime, Fitzgerald's sexuality became a subject of debate among his friends and acquaintances.[45][46][47] As a youth, Fitzgerald had a close relationship with Father Sigourney Fay,[48] a possibly gay Catholic priest,[49][50] and Fitzgerald later used his last name for the idealized romantic character of Daisy Fay.[51] After college, Fitzgerald cross-dressed during outings in Minnesota, and he flirted with other men at social events.[32][52]

I don't know what it is in me or that comes to me when I start to write. I am half feminine—at least my mind is...

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Letter to Laura Guthrie, 1935[53]

Years later, while drafting The Great Gatsby, rumors dogged Fitzgerald among the American expat community in Paris that he was gay.[46] Soon after, Fitzgerald's wife Zelda Sayre likewise doubted his heterosexuality and asserted that he was a closeted homosexual.[54] She belittled him with homophobic slurs,[55] and she alleged that Fitzgerald and Ernest Hemingway engaged in sexual relations.[56][57] These incidents strained the Fitzgeralds' marriage at the time of the novel's publication.[54]

Although Fitzgerald's sexuality remains a subject of scholarly debate,[lower-alpha 4] such biographical details lent credence to interpretations by literary scholars that his fictional characters such as Nick Carraway, Jordan Baker and others are either gay or bisexual surrogates.[60] Scholars have particularly focused on Fitzgerald's statement in a 1935 letter to acquaintance Laura Guthrie that his mind was "half feminine".[61] Although born "masculine,"[62] Fitzgerald nonetheless stated that he was "half feminine—at least my mind is... Even my feminine characters are feminine Scott Fitzgeralds."[61][63][64]

Critical analysis

Unreliable narrator

Every one suspects himself of at least one of the cardinal virtues, and this is mine: I am one of the few honest people that I have ever known.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chapter III, The Great Gatsby[65]

Since the 1960s, critics have drawn attention to Nick Carraway's status as first an observer and then as a participant raising questions about his reliability as narrator.[66][43] As the narrator of the story, other characters are presented as Carraway perceives them, and he directs the reader's sympathies.[67]

In 1966, critic Gary Scrimgeour argued in Criticism magazine that the narrator's unreliability perhaps indicated Fitzgerald's confusion about the novel's plot, while critic Charles Wild Walcutt posited in the same year that Nick's narrative unreliability is intentional, and critic Thomas Boyle argued in 1969 that Nick's unreliability is an integral part of the novel.[66][66]

Although Carraway proclaims himself to be "one of the few honest people that I have ever known," critics observe that he is shallow, confused, hypocritical, and immoral.[65][66][27] He says little about a previous marital engagement and his wartime experience; both of which are first raised by other characters.[68][69]

Lost Generation

Certain scholars posit Carraway as typifing the Lost Generation which endured World War I. Pictured above: American doughboys during the Meuse-Argonne offensive, 1918

Despite the fact that F. Scott Fitzgerald rejected Gertrude Stein's conception of a so-called "lost generation" affected by the horrors of World War I,[70][71] a number of literary scholars nonetheless posit that Carraway's observations typify the disillusioned Lost Generation.[72] These scholars speculate that Carraway's journey eastward is "not simply to learn the bond business, but because his wartime experiences have left him restless in his midwestern hometown and because he wishes to make a clean break" from the past and its traumas.[72]

Scholar Jeffrey Steinbrink observes that veterans such as Carraway viewed pre-war America as "not simply remote, but archaic, the repository of an innocence long since dead. Possessed of what seemed an irrelevant past, Americans faced an inaccessible future; for a moment in our history there was only the present."[73] Critic Edmund Wilson opined that such disillusioned persons regard civilization as "a contemptible farce of the futile and the absurd; the world of finance, the army, and finally, the world of business are successively and casually exposed as completely without dignity or point. The inference is that, in such a civilization, the sanest and most creditable thing is to forget organized society and live for the jazz of the moment."[74]

I am tired, too, of hearing that the world war broke down the moral barriers of the younger generation. Indeed, except for leaving its touch of destruction here and there, I do not think the war left any real lasting effect.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Shadowland interview, 1921[75]

Although scholars such as Steinbrink and others cite the carnage of World War I with disillusioning younger Americans and spawning the Jazz Age, Fitzgerald rejected such causal arguments.[71][76][70] Instead Fitzgerald argued that younger Americans only became disillusioned after witnessing how police officers treated peaceful veterans returning from World War I.[77] He claimed that the excessive use of force by police officers against demobilized war veterans during the 1919 May Day Riots triggered a wave of cynicism among younger Americans who questioned whether the United States was any better than despotic regimes in Europe and whether the war had been ultimately meaningless.[77][78] Due to this resulting cynicism proliferating among American youth, Fitzgerald argued that the defining characteristic of younger Americans during the raucous Jazz Age was political apathy.[79]

In his famous 1931 essay "Echoes of the Jazz Age", Fitzgerald noted that the younger American generation which embodied the Jazz Age zeitgeist was not the Lost Generation—to which he and Ernest Hemingway belonged[80]—but their precocious younger peers who had been adolescent during World War I.[81][82] These younger persons, whose libertine men and women would be later described by newspapers as "sheiks"[lower-alpha 5] and "flappers,"[lower-alpha 6] became the true hedonistic luminaries of the era, and the older Lost Generation merely imitated the wild behavior of their younger siblings.[81][89][90]

Pastoralism

Scholars posit that Nick Carraway embodies the pastoral idealism of Fitzgerald who cherished the rustic simplicity of the American West.

Throughout the novel, Carraway identifies the Midwest—those "towns beyond the Ohio"—with the perceived virtuousness and rustic simplicity of the American West and as culturally distinct from the decadence of the eastern United States.[2][91] Fitzgerald biographer Andrew Turnbull notes that "in those days the contrasts between East and West, between city and country, between prep school and high school were more marked than they are now, and correspondingly the nuances of dress and manners were more noticeable".[5]

Nick ultimately returns to the Midwest after despairing of the decadence and indifference of the East.[92][93] Scholar Thomas Hanzo posits that Carraway must return "to the comparatively rigid morality of his ancestral West and to its embodiment in the manners of Western society. He alone of all the Westerners can return, since the others have suffered, apparently beyond any conceivable redemption, a moral degeneration brought on by their meeting with that form of Eastern society which developed during the Twenties."[94]

Similarly, scholar Jeffrey Steinbrink argues that "the roar of the Twenties was both a birth-cry and a death-rattle for, if it announced the arrival of the first generation of modern Americans, it also declared an end to the Jeffersonian dream of simple agrarian virtue as the standard of national conduct and the epitome of national aspiration. The new generation forfeited its claim to the melioristic certainties of an earlier time as the price of its full participation in the twentieth century".[95]

I see now that this has been a story of the West, after all — Tom and Gatsby, Daisy and Jordan and I, we're all Westerners, and perhaps we possessed some deficiency in common which made us subtly unadaptable to Eastern life.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chapter IX, The Great Gatsby[30]

In 1964, historian and literary critic Leo Marx argued in The Machine in the Garden that Nick Carraway's decision to return to the Midwest in the novel evinces a tension between a complex pastoral ideal of a bygone America and the societal transformations caused by industrialization and machine technology.[3]

Marx argues that Fitzgerald, via Nick Carraway, expresses a pastoral longing typical of other 1920s American writers like William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway.[96] Although such writers cherish the pastoral ideal, they accept that technological progress has deprived this ideal of nearly all meaning.[4] In this context, Nick's repudiation of the eastern United States represents a futile attempt to withdraw into nature.[4] Yet, as Fitzgerald's work shows, any technological demarcation between the eastern and western United States has long since vanished,[5] and one cannot escape into a pastoral past.[4]

Queer reading

"Keep your hands off the lever," snapped the elevator boy.
"I beg your pardon," said Mr. McKee with dignity, "I didn't know I was touching it."
"All right," I agreed, "I'll be glad to."
. . . I was standing beside his bed and he was sitting up between the sheets, clad in his underwear, with a great portfolio in his hands.

—F. Scott Fitzgerald, Chapter II, The Great Gatsby[97]

As early as 1945, literary critics such as Lionel Trilling noted that various characters in The Great Gatsby were intended by Fitzgerald to be "vaguely homosexual" and in 1960, writer Otto Friedrich commented upon the ease of examining Nick Carraway's thwarted relations through a queer lens.[98][99][100]

By the 1970s, scholarship increasingly focused on Carraway's sexuality.[6][7] Scholars focus on a passage in which Carraway departs an orgy with a feminine man and—following discussion about an elevator lever and suggestive ellipses—next finds himself standing beside a bed while the man sits between the sheets clad only in his underwear.[101] Such passages have led scholars to describe Nick as possessing a queerness and prompted analyses about his attachment to Gatsby.[9][102] For these reasons, the novel has been described as an exploration of sexual identity during a historical era typified by the societal transition towards modernity.[10][11]

Other indications of Carraway's possible homosexuality stem from a comparison of his descriptions of men and women within the novel.[103] For example, the greatest compliment that Nick gives Daisy is that she has a "low, thrilling voice",[104][105] and his description of Jordan emphasizes her masculine qualities.[106][107] Conversely, Nick's description of Tom focuses on his muscles and the "enormous power" of his body,[108][109] and in the passage where Nick first encounters Gatsby,[110] writer Greg Olear argues that "if you came across that passage out of context, you would probably conclude it was from a romance novel. If that scene were a cartoon, Cupid would shoot an arrow, music would swell, and Nick's eyes would turn into giant hearts."[104]

Different scholars draw disparate conclusions regarding the importance of Nick's sexuality to the novel. Greg Olear argues that Nick idealizes Gatsby in a similar way to how Gatsby idealizes Daisy,[104] whereas Fitzgerald scholar Tracy Fessenden posits that Nick's attraction to Gatsby serves to contrast the love story between Gatsby and Daisy.[111] In the eyes of the scholar Joseph Vogel, "a strong case can be made that the most compelling story of unrequited love—in both the novel and the film—is not between Jay Gatsby and Daisy, but between Nick and Jay Gatsby."[112]

Other scholars and writers disagree with such interpretations. Matthew J. Bolton dismisses interpretations of Nick's homosexuality as a case of what narratologists call "overreading."[113] Writer Michael Bourne believes whether or not Carraway is gay "can't be proven one way or the other—but I suspect the queer readings of Carraway say more about the way we read now than they do about Nick or The Great Gatsby."[114] American novelist Steve Erickson, writing in Los Angeles magazine, states that Carraway's fascination with Gatsby is less of his being in love with Gatsby than "Carraway, back from the war and back from the Midwest and wanting nothing more than to be Gatsby himself".[115]

Portrayals

Stage

Photo of Ned Wever
Photo of Neil Hamilton
Photo of Macdonald Carey
Photo of Sam Waterston
Ned Wever (first) originated the role of Nick Carraway on the Broadway stage in 1926. Neil Hamilton (second), Macdonald Carey (third), and Sam Waterston (fourth) portrayed Nick in later film adaptations.

The first actor to portray Nick Carraway in any medium was 24-year-old Ned Wever who starred in the 1926 Broadway adaptation of Fitzgerald's novel at the Ambassador Theatre in New York City.[12] The play was directed by future motion picture auteur George Cukor.[116] The production delighted audiences and garnered rave reviews from theater critics.[117]

The play ran for 112 performances and paused when its lead actor James Rennie, who portrayed Jay Gatsby, traveled to the United Kingdom to visit an ailing family member.[117] As F. Scott Fitzgerald was vacationing in Europe at the time, he never saw the 1926 Broadway play,[117] but his agent Harold Ober sent him telegrams quoting the glowing reviews of the production.[117] The success of the 1926 Broadway play led to the 1926 film adaptation by director Herbert Brenon.

Film

Many actors have portrayed Nick Carraway in cinematic adaptations of Fitzgerald's novel. The first cinematic adaptation of The Great Gatsby was a silent film produced in 1926 and featured Neil Hamilton as Nick.[118] Reviewers praised Neil Hamilton's portrayal of Carraway,[13] but F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald purportedly loathed the 1926 film adaptation and walked out midway through a viewing of the film at a theater.[119] "We saw The Great Gatsby at the movies," Zelda later wrote to an acquaintance, "It's ROTTEN and awful and terrible and we left."[120] The film is now considered lost.[121]

In 1949, a second cinematic adaptation was undertaken starring Macdonald Carey as Nick.[122] In contrast to the 1926 adaptation, the 1949 adaptation was filmed under the strictures of the Hollywood Production Code, and the novel's plot was altered to appease Production Code Administration censors.[123] Critic Lew Sheaffer wrote in The Brooklyn Daily Eagle that Carey acquitted himself well as Gatsby's only friend.[124] Boyd Martin of The Courier-Journal opined that Carey gave a quiet and reserved performance.[125]

In 1974, Sam Waterston portrayed Nick in the third cinematic adaptation.[126] The film received poor critical reviews,[127] but Waterson's performance garnered positive reviews.[128] Vincent Canby of The New York Times wrote that "Waterston is splendid as Nick, the narrator, a role that might have looked like a tour guide's except for the fact that Waterston has the presence and weight as an actor to give it a kind of moral heft."[129] Similarly, Gene Siskel noted "Waterston brings the proper mixture of halting action and determined thinking to his portrayal of nick. He alone The Great Gatsby from so many elephantine Hollywood productions."[130]

In 2013, Tobey Maguire portrayed Nick in the fourth cinematic adaptation.[131] In director Baz Luhrmann's 2013 adaptation, Carraway is depicted as a mental patient inside a sanitarium where he has taken to writing as a form of psychiatric therapy.[132] According to Maguire, the decision to confine Nick in a sanitarium occurred during pre-production as a collaborative idea between himself, director Baz Luhrmann, and co-screenwriter Craig Pearce.[132] Critic Jonathan Romney of The Independent opined that Tobey Maguire as Carraway was the least impressive of the cast,[133] and he lamented that Luhrmann's adaptation disappointingly painted the character as "a straw-hatted goof."[133]

Television

Photo of Lee Bowman
Photo of Rod Taylor
Photo of Paul Rudd
Lee Bowman (first), Rod Taylor (second), and Paul Rudd (third) have starred in television adaptations of the novel which were never released in theaters.

Lee Bowman portrayed Nick in a 1955 episode of the television series Robert Montgomery Presents adapting The Great Gatsby.[134] Reviewers felt Bowman was given little to do with the role and observed the actor "made as much out of the cousin [Nick] as was available."[135] Three years later, Rod Taylor played Nick in a 1958 episode of the television series Playhouse 90.[136]

Paul Rudd played Nick in the 2000 television adaptation.[127] Produced on a limited budget, the 2000 television adaptation greatly suffered from low production values.[137] This TV adaptation received overwhelmingly negative reviews,[138] although Paul Rudd's performance received praise.[139]

Radio

In October 2008, the BBC World Service broadcast an abridged 10-part reading of the story, read from the view of Nick Carraway by Trevor White.[140] In 2012, Bryan Dick played Carraway in a two-part BBC Radio 4 Classic Serial production.[141]

List

Year Title Actor Format Distributor Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
1926 The Great Gatsby Ned Wever Stage Broadway (Ambassador Theatre)
1926 The Great Gatsby Neil Hamilton Film Paramount Pictures 55% (22 reviews)[142]
1949 The Great Gatsby Macdonald Carey Film Paramount Pictures 33% (9 reviews)[143]
1950 The Great Gatsby Dana Andrews Radio Family Hour of Stars
1955 The Great Gatsby Lee Bowman Television Robert Montgomery Presents
1958 The Great Gatsby Rod Taylor Television Playhouse 90
1974 The Great Gatsby Sam Waterston Film Paramount Pictures 39% (36 reviews)[144] 43 (5 reviews)[145]
2000 The Great Gatsby Paul Rudd Television A&E Television Networks
2012 The Great Gatsby Bryan Dick Radio BBC Radio 4
2013 The Great Gatsby Tobey Maguire Film Paramount Pictures 48% (301 reviews)[146] 55 (45 reviews)[147]

See also

References

Notes

  1. In the original 1925 text, Fitzgerald specified the "Twenty-eighth Infantry" of the "First Division".[16] Fitzgerald corrected the text in subsequent editions to be the "Ninth Machine-Gun Battalion" of the "Third Division".[17]
  2. West Egg is based on Great Neck, New York.[20] From 1922 to 1924, Fitzgerald resided at 6 Gateway Drive in Great Neck, New York. His neighbors included such newly wealthy personages as writer Ring Lardner, actor Lew Fields and comedian Ed Wynn.[21] These figures were regarded as nouveau riche (new rich), unlike those who came from Manhasset Neck, which sat across the bay from Great Neck—places that were home to many of New York's wealthiest established families.[22] This juxtaposition gave Fitzgerald his idea for "West Egg" and "East Egg".
  3. Only two pages of the first draft of The Great Gatsby survive. Fitzgerald enclosed them with a letter to Willa Cather in 1925. They are now in the Fitzgerald Papers collection at Princeton University.[39]
  4. Fessenden (2005) argues that Fitzgerald struggled with his sexual orientation.[58] In contrast, Bruccoli (2002) insists that "anyone can be called a latent homosexual, but there is no evidence that Fitzgerald was ever involved in a homosexual attachment".[59]
  5. A "sheik" referred to young men in the Jazz Age who imitated the appearance and dress of iconic film star Rudolph Valentino.[83] The female equivalent of a "sheik" was called a "sheba".[84]
  6. Flappers were young, modern women who bobbed their hair and wore short skirts.[85][86] They also drank alcohol and had premarital sex.[87][88]

Citations

  1. Mizener 1965, p. 190.
  2. 1 2 3 Mizener 1965, p. 190; Marx 1964, p. 363.
  3. 1 2 Marx 1964, pp. 358–64.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Marx 1964, pp. 363–64
  5. 1 2 3 Turnbull 1962, p. 46.
  6. 1 2 Kerr 1996, p. 406: "It was in the 1970s that readers first began to address seriously the themes of gender and sexuality in The Great Gatsby; a few critics have pointed out the novel's bizarre homoerotic leitmotif".
  7. 1 2 Fraser 1979, pp. 331–332; Thornton 1979, pp. 464–466.
  8. Vogel 2015, p. 34; Kerr 1996, pp. 412, 414; Bourne 2018.
  9. 1 2 Fraser 1979, pp. 331–332; Thornton 1979, pp. 464–466; Paulson 1978, p. 329; Kerr 1996, pp. 409–411; Vogel 2015, p. 34.
  10. 1 2 Vogel 2015, pp. 31, 51: "Among the most significant contributions of The Great Gatsby to the present is its intersectional exploration of identity.... these themes are inextricably woven into questions of race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality".
  11. 1 2 Paulson 1978, p. 329: Commenting upon Nick's sexual confusion, A. B. Paulson remarked in 1978 that "the novel is about identity, about leaving home and venturing into a world of adults, about choosing a profession, about choosing a sexual role to play as well as a partner to love, it is a novel that surely appeals on several deep levels to the problems of adolescent readers".
  12. 1 2 Playbill 1926.
  13. 1 2 Green 1926.
  14. 1 2 Fitzgerald 1925, p. 1.
  15. 1 2 3 Fitzgerald 1925, p. 3.
  16. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 57.
  17. Fitzgerald 1991, pp. 39, 188.
  18. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 57: "Your face is familiar," he said, politely. "Weren't you in the First Division during the war?" "Why, yes. I was in the Twenty-eighth Infantry." "I was in the Sixteenth Infantry until June nineteen-eighteen. I knew I'd seen you somewhere before."
  19. Fitzgerald 1991, p. 39: "Your face is familiar," he said politely. "Weren't you in the Third Division during the war?" "Why, yes. I was in the Ninth Machine-Gun Battalion." "I was in the Seventh Infantry until June nineteen-eighteen. I knew I'd seen you somewhere before."
  20. Murphy 2010.
  21. Bruccoli 2000, pp. 53–54.
  22. Bruccoli 2000, pp. 38–39.
  23. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 22.
  24. "I wasn't actually in love, but I felt a sort of tender curiosity."Fitzgerald 1925, p. 70
  25. Fitzgerald 1925, pp. 73, 88, 160–161, 205–207.
  26. "Meyer Wolfsheim? No, he's a gambler." Gatsby hesitated, then added coolly: "He's the man who fixed the World's Series back in 1919".Fitzgerald 1925, p. 88
  27. 1 2 Fitzgerald 1991, p. xxxiii, Introduction: "An important revision in Chapter IV involves Nick's morally ambiguous role in bringing Daisy and Gatsby together.... Nick is aware that he is setting up a liaison—not just a reunion."
  28. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 2.
  29. Fitzgerald 1925, pp. 213–214.
  30. 1 2 Fitzgerald 1925, p. 212.
  31. Fitzgerald 1925, pp. 217–218.
  32. 1 2 Mizener 1965, p. 60: "In February he put on his Show Girl make-up and went to a Psi U dance at the University of Minnesota with his old friend Gus Schurmeier as escort. He spent the evening casually asking for cigarettes in the middle of the dance floor and absent-mindedly drawing a small vanity case from the top of a blue stocking".
  33. Mizener 1965, pp. 30–31.
  34. "In the early 1890s, shortly after marrying Mollie McQuillan, Edward Fitzgerald organized the American Rattan & Willow Works, which manufactured wicker furniture".West 2005, p. 15
  35. 1 2 Kazin 1951, p. 81.
  36. 1 2 Kazin 1951, p. 79.
  37. Kazin 1951, p. 80.
  38. Fitzgerald 1991, p. xxvii, Introduction: "Daisy was originally Ada, and Nick was originally Dud."
  39. Fitzgerald 1991, pp. xvi, xx, Introduction.
  40. Eble 1964, p. 325: "Earlier in the draft, Fitzgerald removed a number of references to a previous romance between Daisy and Nick".
  41. Fraser 1979, p. 332: "What is perhaps revealing are Nick's original words, the words Fitzgerald began to use, then scratched out and buried beneath the curious reason Nick offers for his escape from this girl. The words he starts to use, to explain the breakup, are 'but her brother began favoring me with . . . '"
  42. 1 2 Bruccoli 2002, p. 178; Bruccoli 1978, p. 176.
  43. 1 2 3 Fitzgerald 1991, p. xxviv, Introduction: "The effect of the third-person biographical form is to strengthen Nick's function as narrator and to obscure Gatsby's voice. Indeed, Gatsby speaks little in the novel; Nick reports most of what Gatsby says to him—but in Nick-ese, not in Gatsby-ese."
  44. Kerr 1996, pp. 409–411; Vogel 2015, p. 34; Paulson 1978, p. 329; Wasiolek 1992, pp. 20–21.
  45. Fessenden 2005, p. 28: "Fitzgerald's career records the ambient, dogging pressure to repel charges of his own homosexuality".
  46. 1 2 Bruccoli 2002, p. 284: According to biographer Matthew J. Bruccoli, author Robert McAlmon and other contemporaries in Paris publicly asserted that Fitzgerald was a homosexual, and Hemingway later avoided Fitzgerald due to these rumors.
  47. Milford 1970, p. 154; Kerr 1996, p. 417.
  48. Fessenden 2005, p. 28: "Biographers describe Fay as a 'fin-de-siècle aesthete' of considerable appeal; 'a dandy, always heavily perfumed,' who introduced the teenaged Fitzgerald to Oscar Wilde and good wine".
  49. Fessenden 2005, p. 28
  50. Bruccoli 2002, p. 275: "If Fay was a homosexual, as has been asserted without proof, Fitzgerald was presumably unaware of it".
  51. Fessenden 2005, p. 30.
  52. Fraser 1979, pp. 338–339.
  53. Turnbull 1962, p. 259.
  54. 1 2 Fessenden 2005, p. 33.
  55. Milford 1970, p. 183.
  56. Fitzgerald & Fitzgerald 2002, p. 65.
  57. Bruccoli 2002, p. 275: "Zelda extended her attack on Fitzgerald's masculinity by charging that he was involved in a homosexual liaison with Hemingway".
  58. Fessenden 2005, pp. 32–33.
  59. Bruccoli 2002, p. 275.
  60. Kerr 1996, p. 406.
  61. 1 2 Turnbull 1962, p. 259; Fraser 1979, p. 334; Thornton 1979, p. 457; Kerr 1996, p. 406.
  62. Thornton 1979, p. 457: "Being born 'masculine,' but feeling 'half-feminine,' Fitzgerald was personally interested in sexual differentiation from an early age."
  63. Fessenden 2005, p. 31: The novel "includes some queer energies, to be sure—we needn't revisit the more gossipy strains of Fitzgerald biography to note that it's Nick who delivers the sensuous goods on Gatsby from beginning to end".
  64. Fraser 1979, p. 330: Fitzgerald wrote that "we are all queer fish, queerer behind our faces and voices than we want any one to know or than we know ourselves. When I hear a man proclaiming himself an 'average, honest, open fellow,' I feel pretty sure that he has some definite and perhaps terrible abnormality".
  65. 1 2 Fitzgerald 1925, p. 72.
  66. 1 2 3 4 Boyle 1969, p. 22.
  67. Hanzo 1956, pp. 186–187; Boyle 1969, pp. 22–26.
  68. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 24: "I forgot to ask you something, and it's important. We heard you were engaged to a girl out West."
  69. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 57: "Your face is familiar," he said, politely. "Weren't you in the First Division during the war?"
  70. 1 2 Bruccoli 2002, p. 278: "The concluding passage from 'The Swimmers' also served as Fitzgerald's rebuttal to Gertrude Stein's 'lost generation' catch phrase that had achieved currency through Hemingway's use of it as an epigraph for The Sun Also Rises. Whereas Stein had identified the lost generation with the war veterans, Fitzgerald insisted that the lost generation was the prewar group and expressed confidence in 'the men of the war.'"
  71. 1 2 Fitzgerald 2004, p. 7: "I am tired, too, of hearing that the world war broke down the moral barriers of the younger generation. Indeed, except for leaving its touch of destruction here and there, I do not think the war left any real lasting effect."
  72. 1 2 Steinbrink 1980, p. 160.
  73. Steinbrink 1980, p. 157.
  74. Kazin 1951, p. 83.
  75. Fitzgerald 2004, p. 7.
  76. Fitzgerald 2004, p. 7: "The younger generation has been changing all through the last twenty years. The war had little or nothing to do with it."
  77. 1 2 Fitzgerald 1945, p. 13: "When the police rode down the demobilized country boys gaping at the orators in Madison Square, it was the sort of measure bound to alienate the more intelligent young men from the prevailing order. We didn't remember anything about the Bill of Rights until Mencken began plugging it, but we did know that such tyranny belonged in the jittery little countries of South Europe."
  78. Fitzgerald 1945, p. 13: "If goose-livered business men had this effect on the government, then maybe we had gone to war for J. P. Morgan's loans after all."
  79. Fitzgerald 1945, pp. 13–14: "But, because we were tired of Great Causes, there was no more than a short outbreak of moral indignation... It was characteristic of the Jazz Age that it had no interest in politics at all."
  80. Gray 1946, p. 59: "They were the most conspicuous representatives of that 'lost generation,' fragments of which Gertrude Stein was forever stumbling upon in the byways of Paris."
  81. 1 2 Fitzgerald 1945, pp. 14–15: "Scarcely had the staider citizens of the republic caught their breaths when the wildest of all generations, the generation which had been adolescent during the confusion of the War, brusquely shouldered my contemporaries out of the way and danced into the limelight. This was the generation whose girls dramatized themselves as flappers..."
  82. Fitzgerald 1945, p. 15.
  83. Savage 2007, pp. 206–207, 225–226.
  84. Perrett 1982, pp. 151–152.
  85. Conor 2004, p. 209: "More than any other type of the Modern Woman, it was the Flapper who embodied the scandal which attached to women's new public visibility, from their increasing street presence to their mechanical reproduction as spectacles".
  86. Conor 2004, pp. 210, 221.
  87. Fitzgerald 1945, p. 16, "Echoes of the Jazz Age": The flappers, "if they get about at all, know the taste of gin or corn at sixteen".
  88. Fitzgerald 1945, pp. 14–15, "Echoes of the Jazz Age": "Unchaperoned young people of the smaller cities had discovered the mobile privacy of that automobile given to young Bill at sixteen to make him 'self-reliant'. At first petting was a desperate adventure even under such favorable conditions, but presently confidences were exchanged and the old commandment broke down".
  89. Savage 2007, pp. 206–207, 225–226; Conor 2004, p. 209.
  90. Bruccoli 2002, p. 446: "I could name many names and after those wild five years from 1919-24 women changed a little in America and settled back to something more stable. The real lost generation of girls were those who were young right after the war because they were the ones with infinite belief."
  91. Ebert 1974: "The message of the novel, if I read it correctly, is that Gatsby, despite his dealings with gamblers and bootleggers, is a romantic, naive, and heroic product of the Midwest — and that his idealism is doomed in any confrontation with the reckless wealth of the Buchanans."
  92. Mizener 1965, p. 190; Fitzgerald 1925, p. 3.
  93. Fitzgerald 1991, p. xxviv, Introduction: Nick has a "grotesque vision of the East as 'a night scene by El Greco.'"
  94. Hanzo 1956, p. 187.
  95. Steinbrink 1980, pp. 157–158.
  96. Marx 1964, p. 362.
  97. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 45.
  98. Kazin 1951, p. 202.
  99. Paulson 1978, p. 326.
  100. Friedrich 1960, p. 394.
  101. Fraser 1979, pp. 331–332; Vogel 2015, p. 34; Kerr 1996, pp. 412, 414; Bourne 2018.
  102. Wasiolek 1992, pp. 19–21: "I do not know how one can read the scene in McKee's bedroom in any other way, especially when so many other facts about [Nick's] [homosexual] behavior support such a conclusion."
  103. Fraser 1979, pp. 334–335, 339–340; Wasiolek 1992, pp. 19–20; Olear 2013.
  104. 1 2 3 Olear 2013.
  105. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 11: "I looked back at my cousin, who began to ask me questions in her low, thrilling voice. It was the kind of voice that the ear follows up and down, as if each speech is an arrangement of notes that will never be played again."
  106. Fraser 1979, pp. 339–340; Wasiolek 1992, pp. 19–20; Olear 2013.
  107. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 13: "She was a slender, small-breasted girl, with an erect carriage, which she accentuated by throwing her body backward at the shoulders like a young cadet."
  108. Fraser 1979, p. 334; Wasiolek 1992, pp. 18, 20.
  109. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 8: "Not even the effeminate swank of his riding clothes could hide the enormous power of that body—he seemed to fill those glistening boots until he strained the top lacing, and you could see a great pack of muscle shifting when his shoulder moved under his thin coat."
  110. Fitzgerald 1925, p. 58: "He smiled understandingly—much more than understandingly. It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life...."
  111. Fessenden 2005, p. 36: "Gatsby's love for Daisy, all theatricality and flourish, enacts the desire for WASP America, for the girl, green breast and green light; Nick's attraction to Gatsby, all hedges and circumspection, barely hinted at and barely contained, suggests other desires, other Americas."
  112. Vogel 2015, p. 34.
  113. Bolton 2010, p. 197.
  114. Bourne 2018.
  115. Erickson 2021.
  116. Tredell 2007, p. 94.
  117. 1 2 3 4 Tredell 2007, p. 95.
  118. Tredell 2007, p. 96.
  119. Howell 2013.
  120. Mellow 1984, p. 281; Howell 2013.
  121. Dixon 2003.
  122. Tredell 2007, p. 98.
  123. Brady 1946; Crowther 1949.
  124. Sheaffer 1949, p. 4.
  125. Martin 1949, p. 36.
  126. Tredell 2007, p. 101.
  127. 1 2 Tredell 2007, p. 102.
  128. Canby 1974; Ebert 1974; Siskel 1974, p. 33.
  129. Canby 1974.
  130. Siskel 1974, p. 33.
  131. Vineyard 2013; Barsamian 2015.
  132. 1 2 Vineyard 2013.
  133. 1 2 Romney 2013, p. 46.
  134. Hyatt 2006, pp. 49–50.
  135. Mishkin 1955, p. 24.
  136. Hischak 2012, pp. 85–86.
  137. Tredell 2007, p. 103.
  138. Joffe 2000, p. 52; Gilbert 2001, p. D3; James 2001, p. E1; Winslow 2001, p. 33.
  139. James 2001, p. E1.
  140. White 2007.
  141. Forrest 2012.
  142. Rotten Tomatoes: The Great Gatsby (1926).
  143. Rotten Tomatoes: The Great Gatsby (1949).
  144. Rotten Tomatoes: The Great Gatsby (1974).
  145. Metacritic: The Great Gatsby (1974).
  146. Rotten Tomatoes: The Great Gatsby (2013).
  147. Metacritic: The Great Gatsby (2013).

Works cited

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