Winter Dreams Theme of Memory and the Past

Memory and the past are everywhere in "Winter Dreams." Heck, the "Tone" of the story is wistful and nostalgic. On the one hand, Dexter wants to forget his humble origins. He wants to leave behind the memories of his immigrant mother and his grocer father, move to the East Coast, and make tons of money. Dexter's social success depends on his willingness to ignore his lower class background so that he can attach himself completely to the upper class. On the other hand, Dexter's eagerness to leave behind his social origins shows that he also has to sacrifice his own early memories. To make lots of money, he also has to turn his back on the romantic idealism of his younger days. Dexter appears perfectly fine with forgetting about his parents. (Nice, Dex.) But he weeps when he finally understands that he has also cast aside "the country of illusion, of youth, of the richness of life" (6.36) that used to inspire him so much. He has forgotten about the boy he used to be, which is the worst loss that Dexter can imagine.

Questions About Memory and the Past

  1. What details does Fitzgerald give us of the Green family history? Why do these details matter to Dexter's characterization?
  2. There are points in "Winter Dreams" when Fitzgerald seems to be connecting Dexter's particular family history with a larger narrative of the American class system. For example, Dexter (as an up-and-coming self-made man) thinks of himself as "newer and stronger" (3.1) than the old money elites he meets at college. How is Dexter's particular story also a more general tale of the American self-made man?
  3. When does grown-up Dexter appear to feel the greatest distance from the boy he once was in Black Bear, Minnesota? Are there other instances when he feels closer to his past? Why might Dexter's relationship to his past matter in a story about ambition for a better future?

Chew on This

Try on an opinion or two, start a debate, or play the devil’s advocate.

"Winter Dreams" uses Dexter Green's sense of distance from his own past to show off the general flexibility of the American class system. (I.e. Dexter can go from humble immigrant parents to a future in which his children can afford "carelessness" [3.2] in just three generations.)

Dexter spends so much time in the past and the future that he forgets about the present moment. He would have had a more fulfilling life if he'd remembered to live in the moment.