Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Cambridge Companions To Literature
- The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Youth, Maturation, and Adult Sexuality
- Chapter 2 The Beautiful and Damned and Literary Decadence
- Chapter 3 The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Chapter 4 “The Modern Old Master”
- Chapter 5 “I Was Gone Again”
- Chapter 6 Fitzgerald’s Expatriate Years and the European Stories
- Chapter 7 Legends of Zelda
- Chapter 8 Fitzgerald’s Nonfiction
- Chapter 9 Great Art, Small Art, and Modernist Cachet
- Chapter 10 Fitzgerald and Hollywood
- Chapter 11 Fitzgerald’s Cultural and Critical Reputation in the Twenty-First Century
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 9 - Great Art, Small Art, and Modernist Cachet
Reading Himself and His Contemporaries
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2023
- The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Cambridge Companions To Literature
- The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Youth, Maturation, and Adult Sexuality
- Chapter 2 The Beautiful and Damned and Literary Decadence
- Chapter 3 The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Chapter 4 “The Modern Old Master”
- Chapter 5 “I Was Gone Again”
- Chapter 6 Fitzgerald’s Expatriate Years and the European Stories
- Chapter 7 Legends of Zelda
- Chapter 8 Fitzgerald’s Nonfiction
- Chapter 9 Great Art, Small Art, and Modernist Cachet
- Chapter 10 Fitzgerald and Hollywood
- Chapter 11 Fitzgerald’s Cultural and Critical Reputation in the Twenty-First Century
- Select Bibliography
- Index
Summary
“Great art is the contempt of a great man for small art”: This maxim from Fitzgerald’s notebooks squares with his ambition to be among the greatest American writers of his time. Fitzgerald’s evolving sense of who his era’s giant writers were – through the judgments of what he called “the cultural world” – led him by the time he wrote The Great Gatsby and just after to align his work with an elite, international modernism. But as this chapter demonstrates, Fitzgerald’s fiction remained relatively conventional in the context of revolutionary modernism, in good part because of his care for ordinary readers. And the high regard he professed for writers like Joyce, Stein, and Conrad did not preclude his generous interest in more ordinary contemporaries. His wide, eclectic reading of his contemporaries reveals the actual catholicity and conventionality of his literary tastes. The argument suggests that while Fitzgerald’s reputation was bolstered by his positioning himself on the side of the anti-commercial and avant-garde values of the modernist literary field, it was his professional commitment to good, affective writing that proved most crucial to his winning what he most coveted: literary immortality.
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- The Cambridge Companion to F. Scott Fitzgerald , pp. 203 - 222Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023