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How Is Daisy Portrayed In The Great Gatsby

Decent Essays

During the 1920 era men and women were not treated with equality. F. Scott fitzgerald shows a negative view of women during this time. By producing a novel focused in that era, it causes curiosity on what Fitzgerald was trying to exhibit about women and what he was trying to mention society as one. Fitzgerald shows the vision of women within the 1920’s by portraying the characters as an image of the stereotypes happening during that time. In the Great Gatsby there are men that dominated emotionally over women. For example Daisy shows through their restricted social independence and appearances that the recent woman of the 1920’s was not an adequate image. Fitzgerald wrote in the reference of the awareness of the early twentieth century era. Women in this novel exclusively Daisy, were perceived as the so called “trophy wife”, who was only to catch sight of men and not to be heard of. When Daisy had given birth and discovered it was a girl she wept and said, “All right, i’m glad it’s a girl. And I hope she’ll be a fool - that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” …show more content…

For example, in chapter four the narrator, Nick Carraway, illustrates a scene when Daisy got drunk. Jordan walks in on Daisy not acting like a lady the day before her wedding, “ I was a bridesmaid I came into her room half an hour before the bridal dinner...as drunk as a monkey. I can tell you; i’d never seen a girl like that before” (Fitzgerald 83.) Fitzgerald describes how Daisy gets drunk and how Nick Carraway is stunned to see her like that. The reason for her crying was because of Gatsby letter to her, but to get drunk was not acceptable, but if were to be the opposite gender it may have not been the same story. It is biased for someone to be expected to do something based petriculary off their

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