| LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Monday 2 May: F. Scott Fitzgerald, “Winter Dreams” N 2126-2143 selection reader / discussion leader: Mary Brooks Background: “Winter
Dreams” is from the Metropolitan magazine (1922). F.
Scott Fitzgerald was born in St. Paul Minnesota in 1896 and became equally a
famous writer and a celebrity author whose life style seemed to symbolize the
decades of the 1920s and 1930s. 1920s:
all night partying, drinking, and the pursuit of pleasure. 1930s:
gloomy aftermath of excess. “Winter
Dreams” This
story was written while Fitzgerald was planning The Great Gatsby and is
believed to be the strongest of the “Gatsby-cluster” stories that can be
found in the collection called All the Sad Young Men (1926).
The general plot of “Winter Dreams” is about a boy whose ambitions
become identified with a selfish rich girl much like the plot of The Great
Gatsby. Desire and Loss “Long
ago, long ago there was something in me, but now that thing is gone.
Now that thing is gone, that thing is gone.
I can not cry. I cannot
care. That thing will come back no more.” N 2143 Nostalgia “…but he found himself glancing at the four caddies who trailed them, trying to catch a gleam or gesture that would remind himself, that would lessen the gap which lay between his past and his future.” N 2130 Idealism “No
disillusion as to the world in which she had grow up could cure his illusion as
to her desirability.” N 2137 Transcendence “Often
he reached out for the best without knowing why he wanted it –and sometimes he
ran up against the mysterious denials and prohibitions in which life
indulges.” N 2130 Regionalism: Set
in Minnesota, Fitzgerald’s boyhood home its descriptions of the landscape and
life of that region is just nostalgic enough to make it a good representation of
regionalism. “There
was a magic that his city would never loose for him.” N 2141 “…his
dream of the city itself, now that he had gone from it, was pervaded with
melancholy beauty.” N 2141 Modernism: Love has a monetary value. “He wanted not association with glittering things and glittering people – he wanted the glittering things themselves.” N 2130 “She was entertained only by the gratification of her desires and by the direct exercise of her own charm.” N 2136 “That odd penny’s worth of happiness he had spent for his bushel of content.” Questions: 1. What is the effect of the use of Modernism on the Romanticism of the story? 2. What part of the American Identity is being described in this story? 3. How well do Romanticism and Modernism coexist in the story?
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