How Is Gender Change In The Great Gatsby

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When watching a film that is transposed from a fiction novel there are usually major changes that occur. These changes can be in the way a character is being portrayed, a plot change, or leaving certain parts of the novel out of the film entirely. It is very difficult to convey fiction to film when in novels, the reader often comes to know characters not through what they say but their thoughts and what is said in narration. In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the readers come to adore and dislike characters through the narrator Nick Caraway. In doing so, the reader only knows about the character through Nick’s eyes which makes him unreliable to the character 's true self. In Critical Theory Today by Lois Tyson she talks about …show more content…

“If she accepts her traditional gender role and obeys the patriarchal rules, she’s a ‘good girl’; if she doesn’t, she’s a ‘bad girl.’ These two roles- also referred to as a ‘madonna’ and ‘whore’ or ‘angel’ and bitch...” (89). These gender roles according to what Tyson is writing can fit into the women characters of The Great Gatsby according to one 's view. Myrtle Wilson is viewed as a ‘bad girl’ or a ‘whore’ as she cheats blatantly on her husband with a married man and doesn’t fall into the ‘good girl’ role. While Jordan Baker is a young woman who stays single she does not fit into the ‘good girl’ role or a ‘bad girl’ role in the rules that they should fall in. And then you have Daisy Buchanan. Daisy is a character that working with these identities can fit into the ‘good girl’ role, she takes on her role as a housewife in The Great Gatsby, and although she doesn’t seem to enjoy it, she still does it. Then you have her affair with Jay Gatsby, which can have her fall into the ‘bad girl’ role. What makes this a difficult role to place her in, is she never is seen being alone with Gatsby in the novel or film. It is insinuated that they have been left alone with one another, but Fitzgerald never wrote it in the novel and Luhrmann never has a scene with just Gatsby and

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