Book contents
- Modernism, Empire, World Literature
- Modernism, Empire, World Literature
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 ‘A Language That Was English’: Peripheral Modernisms and the Remaking of the Republic of Letters in the Age of Empire
- Chapter 2 ‘It Uccedes Lundun’: Logics of Literary Decline and ‘Renaissance’ from Tocqueville and Arnold to Yeats and Pound
- Chapter 3 ‘The Insolence of Empire’: The Fall of the House of Europe and Emerging American Ascendancy in The Golden Bowl and The Waste Land
- Chapter 4 Contesting Wills: National Mimetic Rivalries, World War and World Literature in Ulysses
- Chapter 5 ‘That Huge Incoherent Failure of a House’: American Ascendancy and American Epic in The Great Gatsby and Long Day’s Journey into Night
- Chapter 6 ‘A Wreath of Flies?’: Omeros, Epic Achievement and Impasse in ‘the Program Era’
- Notes
- Index
Chapter 5 - ‘That Huge Incoherent Failure of a House’: American Ascendancy and American Epic in The Great Gatsby and Long Day’s Journey into Night
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 June 2021
- Modernism, Empire, World Literature
- Modernism, Empire, World Literature
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 ‘A Language That Was English’: Peripheral Modernisms and the Remaking of the Republic of Letters in the Age of Empire
- Chapter 2 ‘It Uccedes Lundun’: Logics of Literary Decline and ‘Renaissance’ from Tocqueville and Arnold to Yeats and Pound
- Chapter 3 ‘The Insolence of Empire’: The Fall of the House of Europe and Emerging American Ascendancy in The Golden Bowl and The Waste Land
- Chapter 4 Contesting Wills: National Mimetic Rivalries, World War and World Literature in Ulysses
- Chapter 5 ‘That Huge Incoherent Failure of a House’: American Ascendancy and American Epic in The Great Gatsby and Long Day’s Journey into Night
- Chapter 6 ‘A Wreath of Flies?’: Omeros, Epic Achievement and Impasse in ‘the Program Era’
- Notes
- Index
Summary
The Great Gatsby and Long Day’s Journey are as near as the twentieth-century United States came to creating successful novelistic and theatrical modernist epics. Each work proffers a tale of male rags-to-riches success: James Gatz’s remaking of his impoverished Midwestern self as the gorgeous Long Island millionaire, Jay Gatsby; James Tyrone’s climb from immigrant slum destitution in Buffalo to become the wealthy Broadway star-actor in The Count of Monte Cristo. Both works offer tempting visions of class bonding in the marriage of upper- and lower-class men and women, and of 'high' and 'popula' cultural coupling through male friendship or filial relations. However, in the end, no fructifying totalization succeeds; instead, things come apart and tales of epic overcoming become world-weary tragedies. In their respective ways, Gatsby and Long Day’s Journey testify to the spellbinding seductiveness of American 'low' or 'mass' culture only to suggest the ultimate incompatibility of merging high cultural sophistication with low cultural glamour and popularity. In the age of American ascendancy, American high culture and American mass culture, like Faust and Mephistopheles, need but destroy each other, titanic ambition ending in mutual ruin.
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- Modernism, Empire, World Literature , pp. 196 - 242Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021