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Is The Great Gatsby the Great American Novel?

<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400&semi;">The first book I took seriously in a high school English class was The Great Gatsby&comma; F&period; Scott Fitzgerald’s magnum opus&period; At the time it seemed that this was because I had enjoyed the original 1973 version of the movie as a young kid when it was out on Netflix&comma; as well as the modern adaptation of the book by Baz Luhrman&period; Though these things would not have sustained my interest for as long as the book ultimately has&period; What has kept my interest is the great commentary provided by Fitzgerald in the novel and the mystery of what its implications are for our society&period; This mystery has captivated me for years&comma; far longer than I would have ever expected&period; Here I am proposing to work through the questions this novel poses&comma; not solely as a means for literary discussion&comma; but more so as a way to more completely flesh out the commentary&comma; come to terms with what it means for life in America&comma; and to hopefully&comma; once and for all&comma; put this great work to rest in the American mind&period; <&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400&semi;">The most obvious commentary provided in the novel is definitely related to economics&period; Fitzgerald takes the theories of the early twentieth-century economist Thorstein Veblen into the Long Island of the roaring twenties&comma; an apt home for such musings&period; The novel is teeming with what Veblen termed &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;conspicuous consumption”&semi; in the relatively quiet&comma; old-moneyed&comma; East Egg&comma; with its polo fields and white houses crawling with servants&comma; and in the loud and monstrous castles of Gatsby’s West Egg&period; These two different versions of such a reality are then juxtaposed against the downtrodden Valley of Ashes in a not-so-subtle play meant to direct readers toward thoughts of oppression as the furnace for these lifestyles&period; Though beyond this somewhat thin and now worn-out commentary there is another dichotomy&period; In creating an opposition between East<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400&semi;">Egg and West Egg&comma; Fitzgerald points out the then-rising class war in the United States&period; This is not a war of class against class in the typical sense&comma; but rather a civil war within the elite&period; With the rise of the industrial age and its opportunistic inheritors&comma; exemplified in Jay Gatsby&comma; the hegemony of the old landed aristocracy&comma; embodied by Tom Buchanan&comma; was put into question&period; The norms and customs of the old elite&comma; exacted over centuries&comma; were in jeopardy of being overthrown by a more capable though less cultivated bourgeoisie&period; Fitzgerald dramatizes this battle rather perfectly in Tom and Jay’s struggle over Daisy&comma; Tom’s wife&period; Gatsby&comma; capitalizing on the negligence and arrogance of Tom’s well-known pursuit of extramarital affairs is in a position to step into his shoes&period; Though&comma; Fitzgerald points out that this can never be&semi; Gatsby is not and could never be what Tom is&comma; as Daisy admits&period; We can see this problem still bubbling up in our own time&comma; our current political struggles could largely be explained as competition over the culture of America&period; <&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400&semi;">This brings about the question of what the two opposing orders are&comma; beyond their economic backgrounds&period; Fitzgerald answers the question posed here and does so in a way that holds up to this very day&period; On the one hand&comma; you have the parties of Gatsby&comma; the new order&comma; radical liberality that crosses over various boundaries into stark licentiousness&period; This order is at first intoxicating though&comma; ultimately&comma; at the end of the night&comma; it leaves everyone with a feeling of emptiness and dread&period; The problem with licentiousness&comma; Fitzgerald points out&comma; is not just that it is wrong in the moral sense but also that it is such a waste of time&comma; a palpable waste of time that requires continued and advancing consumption to avoid the complete recognition of this fact&period; No serious or fulfilling answer to the ends of humanity is based on materiality&semi; the signs of this view&&num;8217&semi;s incompleteness are flashing all around us in our current age&comma; and apparently have been for some time&period; Fitzgerald does hand Gatsby and his new order some credit though&comma; largely on the basis of its intense and unwavering presumption&period; This is not to say that the other view is oppositely perfect&period; While it may be in its ideal form&comma; the old order of Tom and Daisy has been neglected and forgotten first and foremost by its inheritors&comma; as is represented in the deteriorating eye-clad billboard for an optometrist&comma; only remembered by those that must live under it in the valley of ashes&period; The result of the neglect of the grounding principles of this order is brought to life in the angst of Daisy and Tom and their compatriots&comma; as well as in their horrible treatment of those in the valley of ashes&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400&semi;">While Huckleberry Finn was once the great American novel&comma; inspiring this one and its contemporaries&comma; as Ernest Hemingway keenly pointed out&period; F&period; Scott Fitzgerald’s Gatsby is the new great American novel&period; Its longstanding clarity in commentary&comma; cultural ubiquity&comma; and proper acknowledgment of the problems needing addressing in America makes for a grand novel&period; In addition to the fact that following its ascension&comma; the American literary tradition has been consumed by similar social commentary and psychodrama&period; However&comma; I am still hopeful that someone could dethrone Fitzgerald and Gatsby&comma; not because I have any intense disdain for the book&comma; but rather because these problems need to be addressed and seen from a new perspective&period; For almost a century now we have either collapsed under the burden of advancing from these problems &lpar;as is gruesomely highlighted in the downfall of Fitzgerald into alcoholism and his companion expatriate Ernest Hemingway into madness&rpar; or shied away from these problems entirely&period; In my estimation&comma; this is because we as a nation do not have the strength to humble ourselves and embark on the journey of accepting and living by the true but cutting solutions&period; I think we will be hard-pressed to find a writer willing to admit the fact that he cannot articulate such answers on his own&comma; as so many have failed to do in the recent past&comma; though we must still have hope&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><em>Featured image via AWN&period;com&period;<&sol;em><&sol;p>&NewLine; <&excl;-- WP Biographia v4&period;0&period;0 -->&NewLine;<div class&equals;"wp-biographia-container-top" style&equals;"background-color&colon; &num;FFEAA8&semi; border-top&colon; 4px solid &num;000000&semi;"><div class&equals;"wp-biographia-pic" style&equals;"height&colon;100px&semi; width&colon;100px&semi;"><img alt&equals;'' src&equals;'https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;Screen-Shot-2022-11-14-at-2&period;24&period;33-PM-e1668457510941&period;png' srcset&equals;'https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;wp-content&sol;uploads&sol;Screen-Shot-2022-11-14-at-2&period;24&period;33-PM-e1668457510941&period;png 2x' class&equals;'wp-biographia-avatar avatar-100 photo' height&equals;'100' width&equals;'100' &sol;><&sol;div><div class&equals;"wp-biographia-text"><h3>About <a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;author&sol;cooperpugach&sol;" title&equals;"Cooper Pugach">Cooper Pugach<&sol;a><&sol;h3><p>Cooper is an assistant editor of the common ground section and a sophomore&period; He studies political science and classics and wants to work in journalism after school&period; When he is not thinking about politics and writing he enjoys fishing&comma; golfing&comma; and reading&period; Cooper’s literary influences include Ring Lardner and Ernest Hemingway&period;<&sol;p><div class&equals;"wp-biographia-links"><small><ul class&equals;"wp-biographia-list wp-biographia-list-text"><li><a href&equals;"mailto&colon;cpug&&num;97&semi;ch&&num;64&semi;t&&num;117&semi;&&num;108&semi;&&num;97&semi;&&num;110&semi;e&period;&&num;101&semi;&&num;100&semi;&&num;117&semi;" target&equals;"&lowbar;self" title&equals;"Send Cooper Pugach Mail" class&equals;"wp-biographia-link-text">Mail<&sol;a><&sol;li> &vert; <li><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;tulanemagazine&period;com&sol;author&sol;cooperpugach&sol;" target&equals;"&lowbar;self" title&equals;"More Posts By Cooper Pugach" class&equals;"wp-biographia-link-text">More Posts&lpar;11&rpar;<&sol;a><&sol;li><&sol;ul><&sol;small><&sol;div><&sol;div><&sol;div><&excl;-- WP Biographia v4&period;0&period;0 -->&NewLine;

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