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了不起的盖茨比英文论文.doc

1、 摘 要 弗朗西斯·司科特·菲茨杰拉德是二十世纪美国最重要的作家之一,被推崇为“爵士时代”的编年史家和桂冠诗人。他不仅亲身经历了美国历史上“最会纵乐、最讲究炫丽”的时代的生活,而且以敏锐的目光,审视着那个时代所发生的一切。 《了不起的盖茨比》于1925年发表,是二十世纪最优秀的小说之一。托·斯·艾略特称它是“亨利·詹姆斯以后美国小说迈出的第一步。《了不起的盖茨比》是对美国梦的实质的批评。美国文化的特征之一表现为:在强化追求物质财富的成功的同时,忽视了为追求物质财富的成功而采取合法手段的重要性。 本论文从人物分析着手,从社会、历史、以及作者自身经历和世界观等多方面探讨导致主人公盖茨比梦

2、毁人亡的根源存在。美国梦幻灭不仅有其深刻的社会历史原因,且与盖茨比性格中的自我毁灭因素息息相关。通过分析我们可以看出盖茨比之梦的历史渊源和实质,盖茨比性格中的天直单纯和不谙世故以及以汤姆、黛西为代表的美国社会的冷酷无情和道德沦丧。这些从根本上决定了美国梦的幻灭。本文主要通过人物分析来分析作品的主题,并将二者有机地统一起来,意在较全面深刻地解读作品的内涵。 关键词:《了不起的盖茨比》;弗朗西斯·司科特·菲茨杰拉德;成功 Abstract F. Scott. Fitzgerald was one of the most representative American nove

3、lists of the 1920s. He was not only a leading participant in the typically frivolous, carefree, moneymaking life of the decade but also a detached observer of it. The Great Gatsby (1925) is regarded by many critics as one of the finest twentieth- century American novels. T. S. Eliot called it “the f

4、irst step the American novel has taken since Henry James.” The Great Gatsby is a general critique of the American dream. American culture is characterized by a strong emphasis on the goal of monetary success and a weak emphasis on the importance of the legitimate means for the pursuit of success. T

5、his thesis analyzes the roots of the disillusionment of Gatsby’s dream from the historical and authorial perspectives, By exploring the origins and essential nature of Gatsby’s dream, the naivety and innocence in the personality and the cruelty of Jazz Age society epitomized by the ruthless and immo

6、ral Buchanan, the paper draws the conclusion that a combination of these elements defines Gatsby’s failure and destruction in the end. Theme discussion in this paper is basically done through history and character analysis, which aims for better understanding of those connotations of the novel.

7、Key words: The Great Gatsby, F. Scott. Fitzgerald, success II Contents Abstract in Chinese I Abstract II 1. Introduction 1 1.1 The Synopsis of F. Scott. Fitzgerald 1 1.2 Social and Historical Background of The Great Gatsby 1 2. Formation of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby 2

8、 2.1 The American Dream 2 2.2The American Dream of Gatsby 4 3. Reasons for Gatsby’s Shattered American Dream 6 3.1 Gatsby’s Pursuit of Pure Love 6 3.2 Social Conflicts Due to Different Economic Status 6 4. Conclusion 8 References 10 Acknowledgements 11 1.

9、Introduction 1.1 The synopsis of F. Scott. Fitzgerald F. Scott. Fitzgerald was one of the novelists of the 1920s. He was not only an active, leading participant in the typically frivolous, moneymaking life of the decade, but also a detached, profound observer of it at the same time. His own l

10、ife was a mirror of the times. He led a priceless life and achieved much during the “Roaring Twenties”, drinking hard whisky, driving fast cars, and taking much delight in it. F. Scott. Fitzgerald was born on September 24, 1896, and named after his ancestor Francis Scott Key, the author of The Star

11、Spangled Banner. Fitzgerald was raised in St. Paul, Minnesota. Though an intelligent child, he did poorly in school and was sent to a New Jersey boarding school in 1911. Despite being a mediocre student there, he managed to enroll at Princeton in 1913. Academic troubles and apathy plagued him throu

12、ghout his time at college, and he never graduated, instead enlisting in the army in 1917, as World War I neared its end. Fitzgerald became a second lieutenant, and was stationed at Camp Sheridan, in Montgomery, Alabama. There he met and fell in love with a wild seventeen-year-old beauty named

13、Zelda Sayre. Zelda finally agreed to marry him, but her overpowering desire for wealth, fun, and leisure led her to delay their wedding until he could prove a success. With the publication of This Side of Paradise in 1920, Fitzgerald became a literary sensation, earning enough money and fame to conv

14、ince Zelda to marry him. 1.2 Social and historical background of The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby (1925) is regarded by many critics as one of the finest twentieth- century American novels. T. S. Eliot called it “the first step the American novel has taken since Henry James.” However, the immedi

15、ate response to the novel was overwhelmingly negative. It was not until 1950s that The Great Gatsby became popular all over the world. It took a long time for the greatness of The Great Gatsby to emerge. The Great Gatsby is a general critique of the American dream. American culture is characterized

16、by a strong emphasis on the goal of monetary success and a weak emphasis on the importance of the legitimate means for the pursuit of success. By combining the traditional biographical and historical approaches, and the approach of cultural criticism, the thesis tries to re- explore the significance

17、 of the American dream. In Introduction, the thesis briefly introduces Fitzgerald’s life, works and the social, historical context in which The Great Gatsby was created. Chapter One gives a reflection of the American dream, focusing on the sacred tradition and the secular tradition which have contri

18、buted to the early formation of the American dream in terms of religion, economy and politics. Chapter Two analyzes the development of Gatsby’s American dream by dwelling on Benjamin Franklin’s and Dan Cody’ influence on James Gatz respectively, Chapter Three expounds on the withering of the America

19、n dream through the analysis of the characterization of the protagonist-Gatsby, Meyer Wolfsheim, Daisy Fay and Tom Buchanan. Gatsby and Tom represent the two major forces in American society: idealism and materialism. Gatsby becomes a victim of the new commercial culture where material success is do

20、minating. In Conclusion, the thesis argues that The Great Gatsby is about the predicament of human beings in general, thus it is necessary for man to figure out ways to minimize the contradictions between man’s social development and the world of nature, materialistic abundance and spiritual pursuit

21、 idealism and reality. 2. Formation of the American Dream in The Great Gatsby 2.1 The American Dream The American Dream as a special product of the American civilizations, begins to take shape at the starting point of the American civilization when the first European Puritan settlers came

22、 to the new world in the early seventeenth century. Therefore, some of the American Puritan religious and moral concepts have gone into the making of the following three essential qualities of the American Dream. First, the American Dream adopts a positive attitude towards material success and

23、 considers it as all important expression of self-fulfillment. That explains the reason why material success is what one most likely first thinks of when it comes to the topic of the American Dream. Secondly, the American Dream is also known to support the idea that the chance to achieve mater

24、ial success will falls onto the person who has high moral standards. Accordingly, spiritual development is necessary for material success in the logic of the American Dream. This idea of appreciating spiritual development equally stems from American Puritan religious belief. Finally, Optimism

25、is another remarkable characteristic of the American Dream. We can see this quality from Gatsby; he never loses his faith and confidence in his ability to attain his life goal from the moment when he kisses Daisy first time five years ago until the last days of his life. The American Dream is

26、the dream of a land in which life should be richer and better for everyone, providing them with opportunities according to their abilities or achievements. It encourages people to work through efforts, courage, creativity and determination to move towards prosperity, rather than rely on any other fo

27、rces. In one time, it did help some people to fight for success. But as time flew, the American dream went to the other side. So in this case, the essay aims to discuss the disillusion of the so-called American Dream, also the theme of The Great Gatsby, with the analysis of the tragedy of its main c

28、haracter——Gatsby. This part intends to make an study of how the American Dream gets enriched and developed with the advancement of the nation. First, the American Dream is an ideal that expresses human hopes and wishes for a democratic, liberal society, where man’s basic demand for survi

29、val, self-fulfillment and social recognition can be ensured. It is supposed that in such a society, no man is despised due to his origin and every one shall equally have the opportunity to achieve his due success and happiness if he works hard toward a goal. Secondly, carrying forward the Puri

30、tan tradition, the American Dream goes on to healthily grow up in American capitalist democratic soil. And it successfully pushes the advancement of the nation and becomes a reality in many fortunate self-made men cases in the early age of America. Among these people, Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Ediso

31、n and Abraham Lincoln are the most famous representatives. They all come from poor origins and win the unanimous reverence of the nation. Their successful legendary careers proclaim to the world that every one can achieve success in America if he has confidence, aspiration, determination, and virtue

32、s, regardless of his origin. Consequently, with its worthwhile role in the progress of the nation and individuals, the American Dream gradually becomes an unwavering belief in the mind of the whole nation. 2.2 The American Dream of Gatsby In the last chapter of the novel, Gatsby’s fathe

33、r proudly showed Gatsby’s schedule and general resolves written in 1906 on the last fly-leaf of the “ragged” copy book called Hopalong Cassidy (Fitzgerald, 1992: 110) to Nick. It tells how deeply young Gatsby has absorbed the ideas of Benjamin Franklin through his autobiography into his ambition to

34、be successful, believing that a man can be what he want to be by hard working. Horatio Alger (1834-1899), writer of the book Hopalon Cassidy, is another person who had large influence on young James in forming his early belief. Alger has probably been the most widely read of all American write

35、rs. “His novels tend to follow the same pattern: a boy works his way up from poverty to respectability through hard work, thrift and good luck.” (Matterson, 1990: 65) To Alger, everything is determined by the efforts and the character of the individuals. Gatsby actually starts by struggling for adva

36、ncement in the Alger method. So, Gatsby’s Dream, as some critics have pointed out, has been an illusion that he could never has fulfilled. The development of Gatsby’s dream is the history of his involvement with a social class, the American rich. At the beginning, he planed to be rich and suc

37、cessful in imitation of the way of Benjamin Franklin and Horatio Alger. But he failed in the end. Then he met Dan Cody, who becomes Gatsby’s image of the wealthy and successful man, from that time, Gatsby developed his new own social style and learned his way of acquisition of wealth. As well as im

38、age for himself, however, Gatsby needs an image of something beyond him to which he can aspire, and this final stage of his imaginative development is completed when he meets Daisy and falls in love with her, When he kissed her at the first time, he has “wed forever his ineffable vision to her peris

39、hable breath” and “the incarnation was completed.” (Fitzgerald, 1992: 71) And ever since then she becomes the center of his dream. For him, Daisy is not only as a woman but also as the symbol of a way of life. Her life and everything about her is another world to him. As a matter of fact, Gatsby fa

40、ils to get marry with her. Gatsby learns a lot from the fact that he loses her just simply because “he had no comfortable family standing behind him”, that he must have “the same status” as herself and enough money to give her “a sense of security” (Fitzgerald, 1992: 95) in order to win her back. So

41、 during the followed years since their parting, Gatsby works even harder to accumulate wealth through every possible means without the least sense of guilt. As analyzed above, Gatsby’s dream is multileveled. Lockridge writes that Gatsby’s dream has three “basic and related parts: the desire for mon

42、ey, the desire to repeat the past, and the desire for incarnation of “unutterable visions ”in the material earth.” In The Great Gatsby, it is clear that Fitzgerald is critical of the American dream itself, seeing it as “an illusion of liberty and openness,but which has always been historically

43、 ineffectual. It was invalidated by its crude association with materialism.” (Matterson, 1990: 33) This is strongly represented in the career of Gatsby, who as known is the true co-heiress of the American dream. The confusion of the romantic ideal with the mere making of money is a first conflict in

44、 the dream. And the gap between the intensity of Gatsby’s devotion and the “cause” to which he is devoted is not to be neglected. And above all, as an embodiment of the American dreams Gatsby’s dream is fatally in conflict with the rigid reality. The conflict of Gatsby’s dream with the realit

45、y is obviously presented in his well-imagined autobiography. He cuts off the real past of himself and invents for himself a completely new identity to meet the value of America popular culture. In support of his new identity, Gatsby adopts what he believes are the true mannerisms and surrounds himse

46、lf with what he believes are the right props. However, Gatsby’s mannerisms and props often fail. The world he created is so fragile that it can not bear the slightest test of the reality. 3. Reasons for Gatsby’s shattered American Dream 3.1 Gatsby’s pursuit of pure love To Gatsby, Daisy is

47、 his true love and represents perfection. She has the aura of charm, wealth, grace and aristocracy that he longed. In reality, however, Daisy falls far short of Gatsby’s ideal. She is beautiful and charming, but also fickle, shallow, hypocritical. She is careless person who smashes thing up and then

48、 retreats behind her money. She allows Gatsby to take the blame for killing Myrtle ever though she herself was driving the car. Finally, rather than attend Gatsby’s funeral, Daisy is love with money, easy, and material luxury. She seems to love Gatsby, but not of sustained loyalty or care. Fro

49、m the above, we know the real Daisy. But Gatsby did not know her clearly. This is the main reason why Gatsby’s dream cannot come true. When Gatsby fell in love with Daisy, “he knew that Daisy was extraordinary, but he didn’t realize just how extraordinary a “nice” girl could be. She vanished into he

50、r rich house, into her rich, full life, leaving Gatsby-nothing.” “In various unrevealed capacities he had come in contact with such people, but always with indiscernible barbed wire between.” After the war, Gatsby got rich, but Daisy got married. He only got several times to be with her and know her

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