F. Scott Fitzgerald

Author

American · 20th century

Author of The Great Gatsby. Associated with the Jazz Age, the American Dream, and doomed romanticism built on illusion.

Connection to Taylor Swift

Invoked across the catalogue’s Gatsby register. In the last great american dynasty Uncle Jerry hears The Great Gatsby in both the Jazz-Age excess (champagne, lavish parties, wild jewellery) and the structure: a central figure narrated from the outside by onlookers who never fully know her. happiness draws on the novel more directly still, its “beautiful fool who takes my spot next to you” echoing Daisy Buchanan’s wish that her daughter grow up “a beautiful little fool”.

Notable Works

  • The Great Gatsby, Tender is the Night

Context within the Archive

The Great Gatsby

I hope she’ll be a beautiful fool, who takes my spot next to you

The line “I hope she’ll be a beautiful fool, who takes my spot next to you” echoes Daisy Buchanan in The Great Gatsby, who hopes her infant daughter will grow up “a beautiful little fool”, the best thing she believes a girl can be in a world that punishes women for seeing clearly. Taylor turns Daisy’s resigned wish into the narrator’s bitter blessing on the woman who will replace her.

Personal

The Great Gatsby

Filled the pool with champagne and swam with the big names

Uncle Jerry identifies echoes of The Great Gatsby in both the extravagance (champagne in swimming pools, outlandish outfits, crazy jewelry) and the narrative style, the story told through outsiders looking in, never truly knowing the central figure. Angela & Uncle Jerry note that Gatsby is told through the eyes of Nick Carraway who walks with Jay Gatsby but never truly knows him, paralleling how the townspeople narrate Rebekah's life without understanding it. Angela also notes Taylor has other songs with Gatsby allusions, including one from Reputation where she says 'we were swimming in a champagne sea.'

Podcast analysis

The Great Gatsby

I won't confess that I waited, but I let the lamp burn

Community readers liken the lamp the speaker keeps burning at the window to the green light at the end of the dock in The Great Gatsby, a light that stands in for a longed-for figure who never comes. The same gesture carries the idiom of carrying a torch, or keeping an old flame.

Community comment