The Great Gatsby Pastoralism Essay

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Throughout the history of the United States, one idea has been central in defining what it means to be American. Presented in Leo Marx’s book, The Machine in the Garden, the central concept of the Pastoral Ideal is shown as evolving with the nation. While literature has continuously displayed a veritable affection for a perfect balance between the wild and savage environment and the industrial scene, it is not apparent what precisely distinguishes one extreme from the other, only that the balance is the ideal. In the epilogue of The Machine in the Garden, Marx summarizes the trend of American literature from Sleepy Hollow to Moby Dick and Huckleberry Finn. Finally, he transfers to the more modern word with the introduction of The Great Gatsby. Marx uncovers the hidden pastoral ideal in the novel, but does not dive into the differences causing the rebellion from technology or the effect these changes have on the pastoral ideal. No longer explicitly representing the intrusion of technology into a blissful natural environment, The Great Gatsby marks a transition to pastoralism as a reaction to the materialistic excess in a …show more content…

Marx, intent on portraying the machine as an intrusion, shows New York and the surrounding suburbs as a “hideous, man-made wilderness” (Marx 358). While there is no denying that “the valley of ashes,” a desolate industrial slum, is hideous and heavily polluted, this description occurs in the very same sentence and is listed as the cause of “Gatsby’s wealth, his parties, his car.” (358). This proximity immediately gives Gatsby’s luxuries a negative connotation, turning the reader against any perks of upper class life in the 1920’s. On its own, there is nothing inherently wrong with entertainment and a successful career, but in this context it is portrayed as something the reader should be disgusted with, simply because it does not agree with the previously established pastoral

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