Who cares about the author's intentions? Fitzgerald's dead, but The Great Gatsby is still here. And it's still here because it's the kind of great novel that can be read in a variety of ways. Great writers don't bog down their work with their intentions, they leave breathing room for the audience to take it as they will.
Also, I think that people take common-speech hyperbole too literally at times. When someone says "The elevator scene in Gatsby had homosexual undertones," I find it unlikely that they meant "Fitzgerald objectively and factually wrote that scene as an endorsement of homosexuality." Rather, it means, "To me, this scene brought to mind homosexuality." Homosexuality is a big issue today, why not read it into books written before it was such an issue? Books become irrelevant if they are forever nailed only to their historical context.


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True true, Donnie's rant about The Smurfs just killed me. "Sh*t Donnie, why you gotta get all smart on us?"
Fitzgerald shows more than one facet of Nick in this book, that is why Nick is the protagonist, and why the book is so interesting and is being argued about and discussed!!
