34
Contents :
I. Introduction : 1
The Roaring Twenties
A Mythical Time of
Transition in Literature and Society
1. Social Developments 1
2. Literary Developments 2
II. The Twenties and the Short Story 6
III. Fitzgerald's Ice Palace
or The Quest for Identity 9
1. At Home in Paradise 9
2. In the Land of the Snow Queen 17
3. The Ice Palace
Climax and Symbol of Death 27
4. Back to Paradise 31
IV. Conclusion 32
V. Bibliography 33
1
I. Introduction :
The "Roaring Twenties"-A Mythical Time of Transition in Literature and Society
1. Social Developments
If the average person is asked how he spontaneously pictures the most typical scene in the Twenties of our century, he would say : "Pretty girls with bobbed hair and long pearl necklaces dancing to wild Ragtime rhythms with elegant gentlemen, who look all like Robert Redford, in dinner jackets."
Although it is obvious that this description reduces the attributes to a well known cliché it carries nevertheless some truth in it : With the Twenties we encounter a new type of woman, the flapper. Her hairstyle is indeed one of her significances. Also that the newest fashion for women in those days required somewhat shorter skirts, even trousers and ties, like a dandy. However it would be a little pathetic if this were that is significant for this famous era.
One of the alleged forerunners, the author F. Scott Fitzgerald, with whom this paper is concerned, defined the Twenties in his essay History's Most Expensive Orgy as the time when "a whole race [was] going hedonistic, deciding on pleasure." He said further
1 Is this a that "it was an age of art, it was an age of excess, and it was an age of satire." realistic definition, or is this again as one sided and mythical as the former more trivial one ?
The question is what happened in society that it produced such side effects as fashion for women and the appearance of a new kind of music called Jazz? To discuss this problem and to get a more objective and general view of a time which seems quite close and is yet so far away one has to look at the cultural, political and social changes that took place :
The political motto in the Twenties was declared as 'Back to Normalcy !' After the war people were anxious to re-establish their former life routine of peace times. This was mainly applied to the economic area. Successful management in these matters resulted in the consequence that most people were provided with a job and therefore prosperity flourished.
1
Fitzgerald, F. Scott. "History's Most Expensive Orgy". in : Baritz, Loren (ed.). The Cul-ture of the Twenties. Indianapolis : 1970. (p.413 - 423).
2
This was the foundation of the consumerist society in all kinds of fields, supported by many new inventions like the radio and the automobile. Due to a general positive attitude deriving from these developments, people, mostly urbanities, started to change their moral behaviour and their manners.
Especially women claimed their rights for freedom, deriving sustenance from the political egaliterian situation to the men, coming from their new right to vote, in May 1919. The need to demonstrate this new positition manifested itself mainly in fashion. Women started dressing like men to a great part denying their female appearance. There was a general feeling of self confidence altogether which is particularly visible in the sexual area. Fitzgerald comments on this subject in History's Most Expensive Orgy on page 418 :
The married woman can now discover whether she
is being cheated, or whether sex is just something to be endured, and her compensation should be to establish a tyranny of the spirit, as her mother may have hinted. Perhaps many women found that love
2 was meant to be fun.
Many authors who agree with Fitzgerald's views write and talk about loose morals, petting parties and other similar activities when they deal with the Twenties. This myth of greater freedom increases to that extend that one talks about a sweeping social revolution. Something which is new and exciting always finds its way to the media. Therefore new directions in literature and music was explored. Not only in these two cultural areas were people inventive, the discovery of a visual medium caused also a sensation : the cinema.
These possibilities gave an excellent opportunity to dramatise, exaggerate and pervert the seemingly overall easygoing mood of the people. Those were the hay days of the yellow press, which pretended the impression that whole America was engaged in a jolly party.
2. Literary Developments
In literature authors employed a kind of freedom in their way of expression, which was unknown before. Small circles of intellectuals came
2
ibid Fitzgerald
3
up who institutionalised the first adversary culture opposing the established values of traditional, puritan America. The Bohème was situated in Greenwich Village. Main influences and new styles of writing will be discussed to some extent in the following chapter of this paper.
Having this background information in mind it is easy to conclude that bestselling books and stories in the Twenties were all about sex, fashion and having a good time. Nevertheless this statement is only partially true. A good example to prove this statement is D.H. Lawrence 's novel Lady Chatterley's Lover which was first published in 1928. It is a book that deals with the mystical theories of sex, by using a frank language and detailed descriptions of love-making. On the other hand this very example for a new freedom in literature is also a proof that morals in the Twenties were not quite as loose as one might think : the day it came out it was banned as obscene. It was not until 1959 in America and 1960 in England that the ban was lifted. A reading of the novel in comparison with most recent graphic descriptions of some real pornographic books of our time this intolerance sounds ridiculous today.
Curiosity arouses with the question as to what was popular in literature in the Twenties. It is surprising to notice that sexy books, although being published were not easily available. Were readers so thoroughly interested in jucy topics at all ? Roderick Nash gives the answer :
Popular books as well as heroes revealed the American mind in
the 1920s, and the great majority of the bestsellers of the decade were decidedly old-fashioned.Frontier and rural patterns of thought and action dominated the popular novels. Their plots and protagonists operated according to time-honored standarts of competition, loyalty, and rugged individualism. Complications were few and usually resolved, in the final pages, with an application of traditional morality. The total effect was a comforting reaffirmation of the old American faith [. . . ] they both influenced and reflected the mood of Americans who had never even heard of Fitzgerald and Hemingway. Indeed in comparison to best-selling authors, the Fitz-
3
geralds and Hemingways were highly esoteric.
It is obvious that nowadays we are more aquainted with books which dramatise and glorify the 'fabulous golden era of thr Twenties', written by authors who claim to be representative spokesman of this decade. The general mood in literature, however was different. The 'lost generation' found
3
Nash, Roderick. "The Mood of the People" in : The Nervous Generation: American Thought, 1917 - 1930. Chicago : 1970
4
itself in a conflict : on the one hand there was the need to make progress and experiment in a modern time with its profusion of new possibilities, on the other hand there was the search to find stability. Therefore people were delighted to read stories that dealt with the 'good old days' and which dampened their eyes when they imagined how life used to be simple.
It was mostly wild nature that served as the favourite setting of those popular stories sold to millions of readers. Not only as a source of beauty and contentment but a frame of moral and religious truth. The benefits of optimism, confidence and courage were highly valued. Nash summerizes in The Nervous Generation in one sentence how people believed that "clean living, hard work, and contact with God's great open spaces could save a man from the physical and moral deterioration city life engendered."
It becomes more and more clear so far that only a limited circle of intellectuals counted as the revolutionaries in writing. Whereas the average reader was of the opinion that altered conditions doing away with old certainties had only the effect of grabbing old values more tightly. They bought books like 'Tarzan of the Apes' interpreting him as a potent symbol of freedom, power, and individuality. Again Nash concludes that "in popular fiction the Americans of the 1920's were still inhabitants of the nineteenth century. The sexy novels of flaming youth and the risqè movies satisfied only part of the taste of the twenties." ( The Nervous Generation, "The Mood of the People",p.141)
To sum up the progression of this decade being one of the most mythisized eras in it will help to look at the following quote. It is taken from a highly critical article in which the author mentiones the problem very consisely :
And viewing the Twenties as a time of transition will help us to reconcile
this puzzling variety of phenomena in different strata of society. The fundamentalism and reactionary conservatism were as real as the intellectuals' disaffiliation or the majority's attempts at carving out a comfortable niche for themselves. Like other times of transition, the Twenties asked questions and provided contradictory answers. Confusion rather than homogenity characterizes the decade's response to a changed set of
4 circumstances.
(p.67)
4
Kühnel, Walter. "The Cultural History of the Twenties : A Case of Tail Wags Dog" in :
Bredella, L. (edit.). Das Verstehenlernen einer paradoxen Epoche in Schule und Hochschule : The American 1920s. Bochum : 1985.
5
Asking questions and providing contradictory answers does not only apply to times of
transition it is also true for readers studying the literature of those times past. For it is hard
to evaluate what is fact and what is the myth that people created, when information is only
available from second hand.
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Didem Oktay, 1994, Zu: F. Scott Fitzgerald´s "The Ice Palace" - A Story of Initiation, Munich, GRIN Publishing GmbH
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