Gender Inequality In The Great Gatsby Essay

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Within this extended essay, the subject chosen to study and formulate a question from was English Literature, in particular the portrayal of women during the 19th and 20th centuries, where the following novels 'The Great Gatsby' written by F. Scott Fitzgerald and Jane Austen's 'Pride and Prejudice' were set in and originated the basis from. The question is as follows 'How does Jane Austen and F Scott Fitzgerald portray gender inequalities in both lower and upper class relationships particularly through love and marriage within the novels 'Pride and Prejudice' and 'The Great Gatsby' from the different era's it was written in?' This particular topic was chosen reflecting the morality and social class during the two different era's and determining whether there was change in the characteristics of women as well as men and how their behaviour was depicted through the two completely different stories, as they both reflect the same ethical principles in terms of love and marriage. The two novels were chosen in particular to view their differences as well as their similarities in terms of gender inequality through love and marriage, as the different era's it was set in gives a broader view in context about how society behaved and what each author was trying to portray through their different circumstances, bringing forward a similar message in both novels.
'The Great Gatsby,' produced from a well profound author, F. Scott Fitzgerald during the Jazz Era in the 20th century, was written after the First World War about the pleasure seeking spirits American's endured, their materialistic thoughts and values caused the nation's rapid growth in wealth and power- where America was becoming an urban society of sheer greatness resulting mostly ...

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...looking at the society during the 20th century, taking Jordan Baker as an example of a solitary women whom upholds pride and dignity, Jordan defies the typical women of the 20th century like Elizabeth Bennet in the 19th century. Jordan Baker, however has the character which reflects deficiently unlike Elizabeth Bennet, as described in the book, Jordan is 'incurably dishonest' (page 58) with many dishonest traits, and she has the feature of aristocratic pompousness which makes hypocritical, despite her being an upmost independent character within the novel, it also shows that her cynical and reckless personality, through her freedom of independence which she was trying to uphold, was just to primarily receive attention, in particular from men-whom she doesn't commit a relationship towards, as a 'domestic servant' like women were portrayed during the 20th century as.

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