SaklamaKutusu
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

SaklamaKutusu


 
AnasayfaLatest imagesAramaKayıt OlGiriş yap

 

 The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby

Aşağa gitmek 
YazarMesaj
Admin
Admin
Admin


Mesaj Sayısı : 39
Kayıt tarihi : 08/02/09

The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby Empty
MesajKonu: The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby   The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby Icon_minitimeC.tesi Şub. 14, 2009 3:48 pm

The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby
"The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald's third book, stands as the supreme achievement of his career. This exemplary novel of the Jazz Age has been acclaimed by generations of readers. The story of the fabulously wealthy Jay Gatsby and his love for the beautiful Daisy Buchanan, of lavish parties on Long Island at a time when The New York Times noted "gin was the national drink and sex the national obsession," it is an exquisitely crafted tale of America in the 1920s.
The Great Gatsby is one of the great classics of twentieth-century literature."
The Great Gatsby takes place during the summer of 1922. Fitzgerald coined the phrase, "the Jazz Age" that same year to describe the flamboyant—"anything goes"—era that emerged in America after World War
In 1931, a journalist named Frederick Lewis Allen published a volume of informal history that did more to shape the popular image of the 1920s than any book ever written by a professional historian. The book, Only Yesterday, depicted the 1920s as a cynical, hedonistic interlude between the Great War and the Great Depression--a decade of dissipation, jazz bands, raccoon coats, and bathtub gin. Allen argued that World War I shattered Americans' faith in reform and moral crusades, leading the younger generation to rebel against traditional taboos while their elders engaged in an orgy of consumption and speculation.
The popular image of the 1920s, as a decade of prosperity and riotous living and of bootleggers and gangsters, flappers and hot jazz, flagpole sitters, and marathon dancers, is indelibly etched in the American psyche. But this image is also profoundly misleading. The 1920s was a decade of deep cultural conflict. The pre-Civil War decades had fundamental conflicts in American society that involved geographic regions. During the Gilded Age, conflicts centered on ethnicity and social class. Conversely, the conflicts of the 1920s were primarily cultural, pitting a more cosmopolitan, modernist, urban culture against a more provincial, traditionalist, rural culture.
The decade witnessed a titanic struggle between an old and a new America. Immigration, race, alcohol, evolution, gender politics, and sexual morality--all became major cultural battlefields during the 1920s. Wets battled drys, religious modernists battled religious fundamentalists, and urban ethnics battled the Ku Klux Klan.
The 1920s was a decade of profound social changes. The most obvious signs of change were the rise of a consumer-oriented economy and of mass entertainment, which helped to bring about a "revolution in morals and manners." Sexual mores, gender roles, hair styles, and dress all changed profoundly during the 1920s. Many Americans regarded these changes as liberation from the country's Victorian past. But for others, morals seemed to be decaying, and the United States seemed to be changing in undesirable ways. The result was a thinly veiled "cultural civil war."
Sayfa başına dön Aşağa gitmek
https://saklamakutusu.hareketforum.net
 
The Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby
Sayfa başına dön 
1 sayfadaki 1 sayfası
 Similar topics
-
» a analysis of great gatsby
» criticisms about great gatsby
» Feminism and The Great Gatsby

Bu forumun müsaadesi var:Bu forumdaki mesajlara cevap veremezsiniz
SaklamaKutusu :: SELÇUK/İNGİLİZ DİLİ VE EDEBİYATI.. :: saklayabildiklerimiz :: ABOUT BOOKS-
Buraya geçin: