The Great Gatsby Women Essay

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    Women In The Great Gatsby

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    Throughout the history of human development, women have had to fight for their rights, unlike men who have always had their rights handed to them from birth. The reason that women have had such a hard time in their pursuit to be seen as equal is that of custom. Women in the early 1900s were expected to find a rich husband, get married, have kids, and act as a caregiver to the children. In The Great Gatsby, these customs are clearly written. The three women in the novel, Daisy, Jordan, and Myrtle are

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    The Great Gatsby Females Women today have many opportunities that women of the 1920s did not have; although many will still marry. They will not marry for the sle reason of having someone to support them. In F. Scott Fitzgerald novel The Great Gatsby he writes about several female characters who are clearly displaced to us.Although the story revolves around a man chasing a dream, the female characters stand out. Jordan Baker, Myrtle Wilson, and Daisy Buchanan all have different wants and needs in

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    was the age that women changed their basic role as just a housewife. Yes, some still played the role, mostly the rich ones that do not need to work. But others that were single, or driven, or sick of the idea that all they’re worth is staying at home, took advantage of this age. Women could vote, women could be rich and single; women took a massive leap forward from the previous years and challenged the traditional roles of a woman. Traditional roles of women? Before the 1920s, women were expected to

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    many changes in traditional American society; a main change was the shift of American women and their place in society. Women started partying more, which led them to participate in behaviors that were previously reserved for men, like smoking and drinking (ushistory.org). They started defying traditional expectations and also started acting defiantly as well. Flappers came into the picture in the 1920s, who are women that have all the characteristics listed above, and many more distinctive characteristics;

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    Women In The Great Gatsby

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    The Female Images and Senses In the Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby is the representative work of Fitzgerald, which published in 1925. This novel profoundly demonstrates the spirit and the state of mind of the United States in the 1920’s. In this novel, the author not only depicts the typical male characters in American society at that age successfully, but also portrays the typical female images in American society through Daisy, Jordan, Myrtle three female characters. After referring some

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    Women In The Great Gatsby

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    Throughout the history of literature, women are often displayed as idealized characters. Females in the eyes of society are plagued with the stereotype of being kind, nurturing, and tender individuals while men are established as ambitious, assertive, and tough. However, when the time comes for women to possess the qualities of men and men of women, a turnaround of events occur. Women are the individuals that shaped the males into their ending character and faith. Shakespeare's Macbeth, George Orwell’s

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    “The best thing a girl can be in this world, [is] a beautiful little fool” (Fitzgerald, 17). F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby takes place in the time period of the early nineteen-twenties. In this new age after World War I, women’s roles and behaviors began to change in society. According to a feminist reading, women could be seen smoking, drinking, in the company of men without chaperones, and taking part in raucous nightlife as well as violating patriarchal sexual taboos. Essentially, a “New

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    the Great Gatsby, they’re three main women you will follow throughout the story. Their names are Daisy, Jordan and Myrtle. Daisy married a rich man named Tom Buchanan but have feelings for another man named Jay Gatsby. Jordan is a single rich golf player with a bachelorette way of living and Myrtle is the mistress of Buchanan in a unhappy, poor marriags. The women in this story were the ones who all the power, the men were just the ones with all the money and lavish gifts to offer the women in the

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    Women In The Great Gatsby

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    so.) However, the women still seem to get in the way of men. In fact, they seem to either lead to their demise or lead to their depression. In the book, The Great Gatsby, all seems to be well at first; the men are doing their deeds while the women party. However, things soon turn awry. Daisy’s flirting and resolution to be with Jay is what kills him in the end. Believing that Gatsby was driving and that Myrtle’s lover was Gatsby, Mr. Wilson seeks his revenge and he shoots Gatsby in Gatsby’s pool.

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    Great Gatsby Women

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    Fitzgerald crafted The Great Gatsby with a focus on women with high expectations. During this period women gained rights to vote with the passing of the 19th amendment, and as a result, they surged with self expression and confidence. In turn, a mediocre man’s chance of obtaining the woman of his dreams became slim. Fitzgerald’s theme about male and female relationships in The Great Gatsby focuses on the difficulties of winning over a woman’s heart, especially with needy women of his generation. Women’s

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