The Great Gatsby Chapter 1 Summary
The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Setting
Chapter one of the novel is set in Nick Carraway’s home in west egg on Long Island, New York. Main Characters
Nick Caraway- he is the narrator, a thirty-year-old moralist who lives next door to Jay Gatsby and becomes Gatsby’s link to his cousin, daisy.
Jay Gatsby- is a romantic idealist who devotes his life to accumulating wealth which he believes will win Daisy and thus fulfill his dream.
Daisy Buchanan- she is Nick’s cousin, Tom’s wife, and Gatsby’s dream girl. Incapable of love, she represents the idolized upper class.
Tom Buchanan- he is daisy’s husband. Incapable of feeling guilt or any other emotion, he represents brutality, the moral carelessness of the rich, and racism.
Jordan Baker- she is daisy’s friend from Louisville. A young and compulsively dishonest professional golfer,
Plot Summary
Nick Carraway, the novel's narrator, and protagonist, begins The Great Gatsby by recounting a bit of advice his father taught him: don't criticize others, because most people have not enjoyed the "advantages" that he has. Nick says that as a result of following this advice, he has become a tolerant and forgiving person who resists making quick judgments of others. For instance, Nick says that though he scorns everything Gatsby stood for, he withholds judgment entirely regarding him. Nick says Gatsby was a man of a "gorgeous" personality and boundless hope. Nick views Gatsby as a victim, a man who falls prey to the "foul dust" that corrupted his dreams.
In the summer of 1922, Nick, a Yale graduate, moves from his hometown in Minnesota, where his family has lived for three generations, to live and work in New York. He has recently returned from military service in World War I, an experience that left him feeling restless in the dull Midwest. Nick intends to become a bond salesman, a line of work he says that almost everyone he knew was entering. Nick hopes to find a taste of the excitement and sense of possibility that was sweeping the nation in the early 1920s. He says moving to New York offered him and everyone else the chance to discover or reinvent themselves.
Nick rents a house in West Egg, a Long Island suburb located directly across a bay from East Egg. Nick observes that the two communities differed greatly in every way but shape and size. West Egg is where the "new rich" live, people who have made their fortunes only recently and have neither the social connections nor the cultural refinement to be accepted among the "old money" families of East Egg. The West Egg "new rich" are characterized by garish displays of wealth that the old money families find distasteful. For instance, Nick's small house sits next to a mansion owned by Gatsby, a man Nick knows only by name. Gatsby's mansion is a gigantic reproduction of a French hotel, covered in ivy and surrounded by forty acres of lush lawns and gardens.
The main story begins when Nick, who, though he lives in West Egg has East Egg connections, drives over to East Egg to have dinner at the Buchanans. Daisy Buchanan is Nick's cousin, and Nick vaguely knew her husband Tom because Tom also attended Yale. When Nick arrives, Tom is dressed in riding clothes. Tom speaks to Nick politely but condescendingly. Nick remembers that plenty of people hated Tom at Yale, and notes that both Tom's arrogance and imposing stature have changed little since those days.
At dinner, Nick meets Jordan Baker, a young professional golfer, who is beautiful but also seems constantly bored by her surroundings. Soon, Tom launches into a diatribe about the downfall of civilization as described in a book entitled The Rise of the Colored Empires. The book explains that the Nordic race, with which Tom identifies himself, created civilization and is now threatened by the rise of other, inferior races. Tom urges everyone to read the book. Daisy tries to make light of his suggestion.
Just then, Tom learns he has a phone call and leaves the room. Daisy follows quickly behind, and Jordan tells Nick that the call is from Tom's mistress. The rest of dinner is awkward. As Nick is leaving, Daisy and Tom suggest he think about striking up a romance with Jordan. Upon returning from dinner, Nick sees Jay Gatsby standing on his lawn and gazing out across Long Island Sound. Nick considers calling out to Gatsby but stops himself when he sees Gatsby extend his arms out toward the far side of the water. Nick looks across the water and sees only a tiny green light blinking at the end of a dock.
Themes
- Class. The Great Gatsby portrays three different social classes: "old money" represented by Tom and Daisy Buchanan, "new money" represented by Gatsby, and a class that might be called "no money" represented by George and Myrtle Wilson.
- The Roaring Twenties. F. Scott Fitzgerald coined the term "Jazz Age" to describe the decade of decadence and prosperity that America enjoyed in the 1920s, which was also known as the Roaring Twenties. After World War I ended in 1918, the United States and much of the rest of the world experienced an enormous economic expansion. The surging economy turned the 1920s into a time of easy money, hard drinking, and lavish parties.