Fitzgerald's Use of the Four Elements in the Great Gatsby

Fitzgerald's Use of the Four Elements in the Great Gatsby

Eastern Illinois University The Keep Masters Theses Student Theses & Publications 1979 Fitzgerald's Use of the Four Elements in The Great Gatsby John Philip Hawkins Eastern Illinois University This research is a product of the graduate program in English at Eastern Illinois University. Find out more about the program. Recommended Citation Hawkins, John Philip, "Fitzgerald's Use of the Four Elements in The Great Gatsby" (1979). Masters Theses. 3151. https://thekeep.eiu.edu/theses/3151 This is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Theses & Publications at The Keep. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses by an authorized administrator of The Keep. For more information, please contact [email protected]. PAPER CERTIFICATE #2 TO: Graduate Degree Candidates who have written formal theses. SUBJECT: Permission to reproduce theses. The University Library is rece1 ving a ' number of requests from other institutions asking permission to reproduce dissertations for inclusion in their library holdings. Although no copyright laws are involved, we feel that professional courtesy demands that permission be obtained from the author before we allow theses to be copied. Please sign one of the following statements: Booth Library of Eastern Illinois University has my permission to lend my thesis to a reputable college or university for the purpose of copying it for inclusion in that institution's library or research holdings. ~7,Jf79 i Date Autholt I respectfully request Booth Library of Eastern Illinois University not allow my thesis be reproduced because---------------- Date Author pdm FITZGERALD ' S USE OF THE FOUR ELEMENTS TN THE GREAT GATSBY (TITLE) BY .JOHN PHILIP HAWKINS THESIS SUBMITIED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE O F MASTER OF ARTS IN ENGLISH IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL, EASTERN IUINOIS UNIVERSITY CHARLESTON, ILLINOIS 1979 YEAR I HEREBY RECOMMEND THIS THESIS BE ACCEPTED AS FULFILLING THIS PART OF THE GRADUATE DEGREE CITED ABOVE AOVJSER Dff'Al<l~NT HEAD FllZGERALD 'S USE OF TBE FOOR ELEMENTS Di 'l'HE GREAT GATSBY . B! JORN PHILIP HA,.dKINS B. i. :tn. English, Eastern Illinois University, 1975 ABSTRACT OF A TEES IS Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements ror the degree of Master· of Arts in English at the Graduate School ot Eastern Illinois University CHARLESTON, ILLINOIS 1979 t3 ~0~~7. · · .. J ..... t A great deal has been written about the conscientious effort that went into the design of F. Scott Fitzgerald's popular novel, The Great Gatsby, with its var-ious allusions and numerous symbols. A careful reading of this· novel will unveil the author's preoccupation with numerous metaphysical images, particularly the four elements--air, earth, water, and fire--which are considered to be the essential components or all matter. Pitzgerald uses the four elements in The Great Gatsby to coordinate mood and physical settings, to give dimension . to the settings, and to bring characters into sharper focus. The novel employs four settings, each one directly corres­ ponding to a particular element: East Egg--air, the valley or ashes--earth, West Egg--water, and New York City--fire. Most of the characters in the novel are directly re.lated to the symbolic qualities of three of the elements, air, earth, and water. Characters metaphorically . defined by the elements include Daisy Buchanan, Jordan Baker, and George Wilson who are characterized through air imagery, Tom Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson who are associated with earth, and Jay Gatsby who is presented in water imagery. Fire serves prL~arily as a force that metaphorically burns away obscurities and reveals the true motives and personalities 2 of each character. Even Nick Carraway, the narrator of the novel, who seems to have a balance of the elements and gets along equally well with all the characters, is forced to re-evaluate the people in the heat of the Plaza Hotel showdown in New York City between Tom Blchanan and Jay Gatsby. Nick remains objective throughout the novel until the last chapter when he beccmes impressed by Gatsby's 1ntense faith, loyalty, and determination toward his dream of reliving the past. Nick finds that Gatsby indeed is an admirable person in comparison to the reckless society. of the East represented by Tom and Daisy aichanan and Jordan Baker. The valley of ashes, symbolic of the moral wasteland of the·East and representative of the element earth, becomes the tragic backdrop of The Great Gatsby. Earth triumphs in the metaphorical dimensions of the elemental structure of the story. It is within this setting that the wealthy Enchanans and Jordan Baker most obviously display their indifference to human morality, leaving three innocent victims in the path of their destruction. Earth's most representative character, Tcm Slchanan, emerges relatively unscathed: his selfishness and insensitivity make it posaible for him to accept the loss of Myrtle Wilson without lasting pain. A great deal has been written about the conscientious effort that went into the design of Po Scott Fitzgerald's popular novel, The Great Gatsby, with its various allusions and numerous symbols. Fitzgerald himself in planning the novel said that he intended to make it a "consciously artistic achievemento"l A careful reading of The Great Gatsby w.ill unveil the author's preoccupation with numerous metaphysical images, particularly the four elements--air, earth, water, and fire--which are considered essential components of all matter. Fitzgerald uses the four elements to distinguish settings and to characterize individuals associated with the settings. The novel employs four settings, each one directly corresponding to a particular element: East Egg--air, West Egg--water, the valley of ashes--earth, and New York City--fire. He uses three of the elements to delineate characters, with air embodied by Daisy .Buchanan, Jordan Baker, and George Wilson, earth by Tom &.lchanan and Myrtle Wilson, and water by Jay Gatsby. Fire does not describe any particular character, but .functions as a force that causes interaction between the characters. Fitzgerald uses the four elements in The Great Gatsby as metaphors to coordinate mood and physical settings, to give dimension to the settings, and to bring characters 1 Andrew Turnbull, ed., The Letters of F. Scott Fitz- gerald (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1963), p. 163. 2 into sharper focuso The four-element theory is derived from the Greek philosopher Empedocles in the fifth century B.C. and was originally intended to account for the basis of all material existence in the universe . 2 According to this theory, air, earth, and water -are the basis of all matter, with fire acting as the temperature which brings about the trans­ formation of the other elements.3 Since the era of Empedocles, this hypothesis has been expanded to include the four elements as not only the roots of material existence, but also the basis of spiritual life. Character­ istics of the elements are believed to be reflected in the human spirit.4 An airy person is often associated with liberty and movement; an earthy person usually bas a desire for riches, which is often considered an impediment; an aquatic person is related to softness and repose; a fiery person is passionate and lovingo5 Most of the characters in The Great Gatsby are directly related to the traditional symbolic qualities of three of the elements: air , earth, and water. Fire serves primarily as a force that metaphor­ ically burns away obscurities and reveals the true motives 2 "The Pluralists: Empedocles," The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, 1967 ed. VI, p. 444. 3 J. E 0 Cirlot, A Dictionary of Symbols (New York: Philosophical Library, Inco, 1962), p. 91 . 4 Cirlot, Po 91. 5 Cirlot, p. 91. 3 and personalities of each character. Even Nick Carraway, the narrator of the story, who functions equally well with all the elements, is forced to re-evaluate the characters in the heat of the Plaza Hotel showdown between Tom Buchanan and Jay Gatsby.- Nick remains objective throughout the novel until the last chapter when he sympathizes with Gatsby , the character associated with water. Other characters metaphor­ ically defined by the elements include Daisy Buchanan, Jordan Baker, and George Wilson, who are characterized through air imagery, and Tom Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson, who are associated with earth. In various mythologies the el·ement air provides the medium for free movement. Air is often considered the essential ingredient of human freedorn, and we generally find the element associated with the symbolism of light, weight­ lessness, flight, and the color white.6 Images of air and flight are predominant in Nick Carraway's description of East Egg, particularly in the novel.' s opening chapter. This imagery begins as Nick arrives at the Buchanan mansion "on a windy evening."7 Upon entering the living room , he observes: 6 ·cirlot, pp . 5-6. 7 F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1925), p. 6. Subsequent Gatsby quotations will be drawn from this text. 4 A breeze blew through the room, blew curtains in at one end and out the other l ike pale flags, twisting them up toward the frosted wedding-cake of the ceiling, and then rippled over the wine­ colored rug, making a shadow on it as wind does on the sea o The only completely stationary object in the room was an enormous couch on which two young women were buoyed up as though upon an anchored balloono They were both in white, and their dresses were rippling and fluttering as if they had just been blown back in after a short flight around the house. I must have stood for a few moments listening to the whip and snap of the curtains and the groan of a picture on the wall.

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