preview

Compare And Contrast F Scott Fitzgerald And Modernism

Decent Essays

The XXth century in the USA is the remarkable period, not only economically, socially, culturally and spiritually. American literature grew up to a new level with the advent of such a flow as the Modernism. Modernism Literature reached its peak in America from the 1920s to the 1940s. F. Scott Fitzgerald was one of the most prominent representatives of this literature and entered Modernism in the United States above all as the first exponent of his ideas. In the works of Fitzgerald the topic “Lost generation” is in disastrous pursuit of wealth that swept the young post-war America.
The fact that Fitzgerald wrote about rich people and their lives is almost always present critical and sober look. Like a true artist, he was always very honest …show more content…

Scott Fitzgerald. In his novel, the author looked into the depths of the soul of each of his hero, to show the reader the essence of human motives and the motives of his actions, what motivates them, reasoned logic, and filled every move the character. He presented the true value of each. And at the same time as it was characteristic of modernism, the author does not mention the positive and negative characters, it gives the opportunity to evaluate each character. In this case, actions and lifestyle of each character, the author makes see his …show more content…

Hence the peculiar shade of sadness and tragedy along with foreign nonchalance in his works. The writer managed to show the atmosphere of the ongoing celebration, which is about to be replaced by something terrible, so terrible that even the characters do not know about it. This sense of the sober mystery and tension reader has throughout the novel. Completing work on "The Great Gatsby," Fitzgerald wrote to one of his friend: "My novel is about how wasted illusions what make such a colorful world that even a man, who taste this magic, becomes indifferent to the concept of true and false" [10, p.286] The Letters of F. Scott Fitzgerald. New York, 1963
The problem of this novel goes far beyond the initial understanding it only as another a sad tale of lost illusions. In "The Great Gatsby" it is put the tragedy of "Age of Jazz" and its special, morbid beauty. But amid this era Fitzgerald puts human problems that are relevant in any society and at any time. Therefore, it is difficult to overestimate the contribution which has been made in the works of Fitzgerald's American and world literature of the twentieth

Get Access