Influence Of The Jazz Age In The Great Gatsby

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“They were smart and sophisticated, with an air of independence about them, and so casual about their looks and clothes and manners as to be almost slapdash,” Collen Moore said of the flapper in the 1920s. It has been said that F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby reflects the Jazz Age in America during the 1920s. It inhabits and depicts a different world that has put up a wall between men, women, and different religions (Berma 79). Fitzgerald does reflect the Jazz Age in The Great Gatsby all by telling the reader a story in a sense from the end about a group of people living in New York in the summer of 1922.
A paper written by Ivana Nakić Lučić has outlined the way that Fitzgerald’s novel reflects the Jazz Age. Nakić Lučić says Fitzgerald
Drinking in the 1920s was very common. Author Mitchell Newton-Matza says that when talking about the Jazz Age, it would not come full circle without talking of prohibition. In The Great Gatsby, many of the characters drink liquor, as this was very popular at the time. The eighteenth amendment made it so people could not drink. It was prohibited but people found ways to obtain liquor, and they were good at hiding it. (Newton-Matza). It was a fun time in to be living in America. The people of this time were very
The reader can see the colors of the “apple-green and lavender and faint orange” shirts (92). The women in The Great Gatsby wore dresses, which was considered the norm of women in the 1920s. Clemente also said that color was about class and showiness. The brighter the colors worn, the richer it made the characters appear. People during this time were all about being noticed. To get noticed, the people wore sparkly outfits and dressed with a certain air about them that appeared to the wandering eye that they had it all together in

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