Essay On Flappers In The 1920s

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American society during 1920s was the period of the significant change for women. During the Jazz Age or the Roaring Twenties, ideas of modern womanhood were redefined by flappers. American women achieved more liberation as they expressed through there appearance and fashion. The flapper’s appearance as well as behavior became more boy-like and not quite feminine. They cut their hair short “bobbed” and wore short and loose flapper dresses with a hemline. Furthermore, the flapper look must have completed with a suitable make-up; to powder their nose, color their cheeks and paint their lips. For their behaviors, as they were more free, liberated and independent, they went to jazz night clubs where they danced, smoked cigarettes and dated freely …show more content…

Also Daisy could be seen with Gatsby in her car unchaperoned. This is another sign that she did not live according to the old traditional value. Later on we know that Daisy slept with Gatsby before he left her party. And she did not keep her promise to wait for Gatsby's return and decided to marry the wealthy Tom Buchanan. She did not marry Gatsby because she thought that marrying Tom was a better choice, and recognized that if she run away with Gatsby, everything she had worked for would be destryed. This clearly indicates that she seemed not to seek for her financial independence by working like new women did. She craves for economic stability and security as marrying a man from aristocratic family could promise her a wealthy lifestyle and support of her parents. She does use the marriage to be the device for money and status but not for love. So, she seemes not to be like a free new women because she is depend and relies on her husband's finance. In addition, Nick Carraway's point of view gives the reader an image of Daisy as the image of a New Woman. When Nick visits Daisy for the first time he describes her dress which it is white, rippling and fluttering.(12) which fits the fashion of the 1920s. And we can she smoke a …show more content…

Luhrmann tries to portray the new women or flapper as the popular mass culture during the Roaring Twenties through the female characters in the film. From the appearance of Daisy that we see in the film, it can represent her as the new woman during the Roaring Twenties, short bobbed hair, long elegant straight and loose flapper dress leaving the arms bare, ethereal feathers and jewelry bracelet and earrings. Her costume can also suggest her wealthiness and upper class status. However, the characteristics of new women are beyond the costumes. As in the scene from the very beginning that Nick sees Daisy for the first time, Daisy is lying on the white elegant couch in the room, the long white curtains are flying all over and the very high key lighting brights up the room dramatically. She seems like an angel living in heaven on earth as Nick says that she is “golden girl”. She is routinely associated with the color white, for example; a white dress, white flowers, and white car, and always at the height of fashion. She appears pure and innocent. However, Daisy's true self revels more and more each time Nick encounters her, her final actions help show what kind of person she really is. When she hits and kills Myrtle Wilson, and lets Gatsby

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