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  2. May 8, 2019 · In Fitzgerald’s most popular novel, The Great Gatsby, jazz appears as constant background music. In the contemporary phenomenon of “Gatsby parties”—festivities intended to capture the air of the titular Jay Gatsby’s famously lavish, bacchanalian parties—jazz is de rigueur to evoke the 1920s.

  3. The decade of the 1920s is also often called the “Jazz Age,” a time when musicians like Jelly Roll Morton, King Oliver, and Louis Armstrong brought jazz music to a mainstream audience. Jazz musicians were almost always Black, and their popularity carried complex political ramifications because 1920s America was still highly segregated.

  4. Published in 1925, The Great Gatsby was the quintessence of this period of his work, and evoked the romanticism and surface allure of his “Jazz Age”—years that began with the end of World...

  5. The exuberant and free spirited era was characterised by jazz music, which became a symbol of the rebellion against traditional values. Gatsby’s extravagant parties, correlated with the era’s hedonism, often had jazz music at the centre.

  6. The Great Gatsby is a 1925 novel by American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald. Set in the Jazz Age on Long Island, near New York City, the novel depicts first-person narrator Nick Carraway's interactions with Jay Gatsby, the mysterious millionaire with an obsession to reunite with his former lover, Daisy Buchanan.

    • F. Scott Fitzgerald
    • 1925
  7. The Jazz Age, depicted in The Great Gatsby, reflects the 1920s' hedonism and excess, symbolized by Gatsby's extravagant parties. Jazz music, central to these gatherings, underscores the era's...

  8. Oct 21, 2024 · Set in the Jazz Age (a term popularized by Fitzgerald), The Great Gatsby vividly captures its historical moment: the economic boom in America after World War I, the new jazz music, the free-flowing illegal liquor.

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