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The Great Gatsby Videos 16 videos
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The Great Gatsby Part 5: The "In" Crowd 25024 Views
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Description:
How do you achieve the unachievable dream? Easy. Be wealthy, party everyday, and fake it ‘till you make it. We’ll let you get to work on that, Shmoopers.
Transcript
- 00:01
We speak student!
- 00:05
The Great Gatsby
- 00:07
The In Crowd
- 00:09
a la Shmoop
- 00:12
You know, one of the themes
Full Transcript
- 00:14
that grabs me about Gatsby
- 00:16
is that people care
- 00:18
so much about being on this in crowd
- 00:20
and the wealthy, even though it's not them.
- 00:23
They'll never be accepted anyway,
- 00:24
even if they really wanted to be.
- 00:27
What does Fitzgerald say about the American Dream in his novel?
- 00:31
I mean, it's basically the idea of the unachievable dream, right?
- 00:34
Everyone in this book wants
- 00:36
to be rich and
- 00:38
wants to be the life of the party.
- 00:41
And no one's going to be.
- 00:43
Even Gatsby, who is the life of the party,
- 00:45
is a total facade. Nothing about him is real.
- 00:48
And so, again, this idea of the unachievable dream makes us
- 00:51
take a step back and think that
- 00:53
the whole idea of the American Dream -
- 00:55
coming from nothing and building yourself up and
- 00:58
becoming rich and successful on your own -
- 01:01
is also maybe unachievable.
- 01:03
And so everything Fitzgerald
- 01:05
says and does and writes about -
- 01:08
Gatsby, Nick, and the whole gang -
- 01:10
we always wanna reflect that back on
- 01:12
American society as a whole.
- 01:14
Fitzgerald himself and all his buddies
- 01:16
went to Paris. They left the country because they were like,
- 01:18
"Well, there's nothing left for us here."
- 01:21
So they even left. So we kind of see this --
- 01:24
all these people wanting what they can't have.
- 01:26
And we reflect that back and say,
- 01:27
"Oh, this is what Fitzgerald thought about America as a whole."
- 01:30
What's Myrtle's role in all this?
- 01:32
She has her nose broken by Tom and...
- 01:35
[ grunt ]
- 01:36
[ glass breaks ]
- 01:37
so on. Talk to us about that.
- 01:40
How does Myrtle embody Fitzgerald's American Dream?
- 01:45
Yeah, Myrtle is another one of these accessory characters.
- 01:48
So she is
- 01:50
Tom's mistress.
- 01:52
She's George Wilson's wife.
- 01:54
And she is just
- 01:56
a victim through and through.
- 01:59
Myrtle is kind of like Nick and Gatsby a little bit in that she's
- 02:02
part of the working class. Her husband, George, is a mechanic.
- 02:06
And she's kind of trying to make her way in to this other world
- 02:09
by being Tom's mistress.
- 02:12
And just like Gatsby and Nick are a little bit on the outside,
- 02:16
so is Myrtle. She's not part of this wealthy elite,
- 02:19
but she's kind of trying to make her way in,
- 02:21
- and it does not work out for her. - Doesn't work.
- 02:23
[ car horn beeps ]
- 02:24
[ whooshing ]
- 02:28
[ whoop ]
- 02:30
What does Fitzgerald say about the American Dream in his novel?
- 02:34
How does Myrtle embody Fitzgerald's American Dream?
- 02:40
[ ooh ]
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