Theme Of Women In The Great Gatsby

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Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby satires 1920’s America as a time of fame, glamour and excitement. It is a time in which women greatly influence the culture. While Fitzgerald uses women as vital characters in his novel to symbolize the beauty, status and personality behind the ideology of the American Dream, there is still a widespread idea is that a woman’s role is not to overlap a man’s role. Men primarily dominate women. Women are commonly evolving into the new mode of flappers who sport knee highs and loose fitting clothing. Their behaviour and attitude contribute to the carelessness of the era and the drive for the American Dream. The characters Daisy Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson exemplify the plight of women in 1920’s America in The Great
Women in this era are deemed as “their celebrity and the fact that their public manners and physical appearance so perfectly matched the fascinating, wanton images projected in Scott’s piece. They didn’t make the twenties, they were the twenties” (Moore 71). Zelda, Fitzgerald’s wife, had a great impact on the culture of the 1920s as a prominent women in society. He projected the character of Zelda onto Daisy as a role model of what a women should be like in that society. Fitzgerald uses flowers are an ascetical representation of temporary beauty, which is particularly stressed in the names of Daisy and Myrtle. A daisy, which is a delicate flower represents beauty and purity. To Jay Gatsby, the name is suitable. However, this beauty and purity represented by the petals is short-lived, as in her center is yellow, which represents her greed, poor values and corruption of morals. The core represents her willingness to lie and deceive for the sake of social class. Fitzgerald only uses the term “women” when referring to females of the lower class, but refers to wealthy females, like Daisy, as “girls.” As the flower dies, in represents how her love of Gatsby did just as quickly. Her name represents the consumerism of the era and the belief that one is better regarding how much they own, the empty values. Myrtle is a flowering shrub, with white blooms but dark berries, as she appears to be beautiful but has elements of darkness. The dark berries foreshadow the blood of her upcoming murder. Myrtle is described as a “rougher” plant than a daisy, describing how Myrtle is lower class than Daisy, but she acts above her actual social standing, through behaviour such as “Myrtle raised her eyebrows in despair at the shiftlessness of lower orders” (69). A myrtle flower is immortal and Myrtle stresses this and foreshadows her upcoming murder through statements such as, "All

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