jazz gatsby

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Jazz Age By: Janice Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby Jazz Age and The Great Gatsby By: Janice Ribet By: Janice Ribet Group of women / photo by Harry M. Rhoads. Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

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Page 1: Jazz Gatsby

Jazz AgeBy: Janice

Jazz Age and The Great GatsbyJazz Age and The Great GatsbyBy: Janice RibetBy: Janice Ribet

Group of women / photo by Harry M. Rhoads.

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 2: Jazz Gatsby

Why did they call it the Jazz Age?

Image Source: Microsoft Office Clipart

Page 3: Jazz Gatsby

Louie Armstrong was one of the most famous musicians of the Jazz Age.

Portrait of Louis Armstrong, Aquarium New York: 1946

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 4: Jazz Gatsby

Prohibition was a key component of the Jazz Age.

Prohibition Bust

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 5: Jazz Gatsby

The 18th Amendment states: “After one year from the ratification of this article the manufacture, sale, or transportation of intoxicating

liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereoffrom the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction

thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited.”

*Stand in a line on the left if you are for prohibition of alcohol, or stand in a line on the right if you are against such a law. Then get in a circle and prepare a five minute

debate to defend your belief.

Rogers, Duke. “Save a little dram for me” 1922 - http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/r?ammem/papr:@field(NUMBER+@band(edrs+50976l))

Sound Track Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Click on this icon to hear - Save a little dram for me / Skidmore--

Walker (Library of Congress item)

Page 6: Jazz Gatsby

In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby , the main character, Jay Gatz was a self-made man from the sales of

bootlegged whiskey. Write a response to the question: What happened to the American Dream?

Cugat, Francis. “Great Gatsby Book Jacket Design” Facts AboutFitzgerald. F. Scott Fitzgerald Centenary. http://www.sc.edu/fitzgerald/facts/6gifs/famous-jacket.gif

Page 7: Jazz Gatsby

In the grand ballroom of Fitzgerald’s home, guests would dance all night to big band tunes like “The Charleston.” This was how

the characters in The Great Gatsby entertained themselves. They would drink and dance the night away.

“Fitzgerald’s House” Built in America - Historic American Buildings Survey/ Historic American Engineering Record 1933 – Present

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 8: Jazz Gatsby

The main characters of the novel Jay Gatz and Daisy Buchannan were based on F.Scott Fitzgerald

and his wife in real life, Zelda.

F. Scott Fitzgerald

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 9: Jazz Gatsby

Daisy the main character from The Great Gatsby, exemplified the traits of a flapper woman from the “roaring twenties”

Jazz Age.

Cover illustration, Life magazine, February 18, 1926, showing a well dressed old man dancing with a flapper

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 10: Jazz Gatsby

Women’s fashions and hairstyles were daring and revealing during the Jazz Age. Women began to express themselves. This was the

early stages of the feminist movement.

Images Source: Microsoft Office Clipart

Page 11: Jazz Gatsby

Fitzgerald was known for his accurate description of the Jazz Age. His works reflect the key events of his own life.

Portrait of F. Scott Fitzgerald

Source: Library of Congress – American Memory

Page 12: Jazz Gatsby

• Born in 1896 in St. Paul, Minnesota• Named for ancestor Frances Scott Key• Daydreamer and poor student• Wrote plays and short stories in his teens• Went to Princeton University in 1913• Wrote for the Nassau Literary Magazine • Entered World War One in 1917• Wrote The Romantic Egotist in military camp• While stationed in Camp Sheridan in Alabama he fell in

love with Zelda Sayre from Montgomery, Alabama• He courted her , but she turned down his marriage

proposal because of his lack of money

About F. Scott Fitzgerald

Page 13: Jazz Gatsby

•Rewrote the novel and renamed it This Side of Paradise and it was published in 1920

• Zelda married him after the novel was published• They lived the life of glitz and glamour in New York and Paris

•Later they moved to St. Paul where their daughter Scottie was born

•In 1925 Fitzgerald wrote The Great Gatsby (a nearly flawless novel according to critics)

•In 1930 Zelda suffered a mental breakdown • Tender is the Night was published in 1934• In 1940 he died while writing The Last Tycoon

Page 14: Jazz Gatsby

“’Whenever you like criticizing any one,…just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve

had.”’’

“Somebody told me they thought he killed a man once.”’

“Oh my, Ga-od! Oh my Ga-od! Oh Ga-od!…”’

*Pick a quote from TheGreat Gatsby and

answer the questions on the handout.

The Great Gatsby

Page 15: Jazz Gatsby

The Jazz Age was the time of the big band sound, prohibition, the flapper,

and the new genre of modernist writing.

Images Source: Microsoft Office Clipart