Race And Social Beliefs Of Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome And The Great Gatsby

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Ethan Frome and The Great Gatsby are novels that depict similarities between the narrators, Nick Carraway and The Narrator in Ethan Frome. They focus on gender, race and social issues represented by the personal experiences and personal beliefs of Edith Wharton and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Wharton’s frame tale style is indeed a form of expressing her beliefs and ideas through a disguise. Wharton is the vessel of Ethan and uses the narrator to communicate with the readers. As well, Fitzgerald idea of representing the narrator as a humane person is a way to identify with himself. Nick represents what Fitzgerald was not. In Ethan Frome, Edith Wharton frames her story by adopting a male persona in the novella, which allows her to speak with legitimacy on the masculine gender. Although some might argue that Wharton wrote her novella using a male narrator for literary context, the reader would display more comfort to listen to her as a “man.” She uses an “Ethan” appeal of masculinity. She focuses on the fact that a man can speak better about another man because of the similarities in gender and class. Furthermore, the narrator’s ability to speak represents …show more content…

Wharton cannot relate to a male’s idea or the social classes that the characters portray, she adopts a different method. Wharton comes from a wealthy, conservative class. Some may argue that her attempt to identify with a person of a lower class status is deceitful and uncommon. She cannot associate or identify her role through a social class or a male’s outlook because of her unfamiliarity. Wharton uses different characters, in particular, the narrator because it allows the frame tale to describe the characters. It may seem like it is coming from the narrator, when in actuality, it is coming form Wharton. Not only is Wharton aware of the absence when understanding social class but she also lacks the inability to write about gender

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