The Great Gatsby Avant la Lettre: New York City as a Place of Damnation in Willa Sibert Cather’s “Paul’s Case”
The Great Gatsby Avant la Lettre: New York City as a Place of Damnation in Willa Sibert Cather’s “Paul’s Case”
Author(s): Ana-Blanca Ciocoi-PopSubject(s): Social history, Comparative Study of Literature, Interwar Period (1920 - 1939), American Literature
Published by: Editura Universitatii LUCIAN BLAGA din Sibiu
Keywords: New York City; placelessness; moral decay; Jazz Age; “Paul’s Case”; The Great Gatsby; capitalism;
Summary/Abstract: “Paul’s Case,” suggestively subtitled “A Study in Temperament,” by Willa Sibert Cather, thematizes some of the main concerns regarding the moral decay of American society and the disillusionment with the American Dream that would be addressed twenty years later by F. Scott Fitzgerald in his iconic novel The Great Gatsby. The story provides ample proof of the presence of such skeptical views regarding American society way before the onset of the orgiastic, almost Babylonian, roaring twenties. Published in 1905, Cather’s story is simultaneously an individual and a societal x-ray of the deepest scars, and the darkest demons, of the world’s most iconic capitalist space, New York City. The city becomes a place of personal, as well as collective, damnation, which fails to offer a solution to Paul’s perceived placelessness. Even though it lacks The Great Gatsby’s ethical and narrative complexity, the story can be seen as a brilliant precursor to the feeling of imminent downfall which pervades the literature of the Jazz Age.
Journal: East-West Cultural Passage
- Issue Year: 21/2021
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 53-64
- Page Count: 12
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF