Women's Role In The Great Gatsby

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In the Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, we are presented with a fictional account of life in the 1920s New York. The decade was a time that begins with prosperity and a carefree living for many citizens of the upper class, nevertheless, the decade was also the worst of times for those who struggle in the lower classes. The story in the novel revolves around a man named Jay Gatsby that is trying to win back the love of his life, Daisy, from his past. The novel takes us through Gatsby's struggle to impress Daisy. “ I hope she did be a fool— that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” (Fitzgerald 17). This is proved that Daisy knew that females intelligence was often no valued in society she has no power or …show more content…

“She smiled slowly and walking through her husband, as if he were a ghost shook hands with Tom, looking him flesh in the eye” (Fitzgerald page 81) Myrtle is always being used for men’s pleasure and she sees her husband as someone that is below her and having an affair with Tom who is rich and powerful make her feel superior. to me, this is another example of how a woman's pride can be so easily bought without having self-respect. In the same way, Myrtle is victim of Tom and commodity, she wants to escape her social class by cheating on her husband by using tom to gain power Despite this Jordan Baker, Daisy Buchanan, and Myrtle Wilson are all versions of the new women in a severely contrast negative form to both traditional and new women. An example of a new woman should be Jordan Baker who is the embodiment of a traditional flapper of the 1920s an independent woman who is arrogant, unemotional and irresponsible. Just as daisy seems a pessimist at the beginning of the novel she also presents self-awareness of her position in society clearly the Great Gatsby manages to show how women were powerless but also is a transition of power for

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