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Status Of Women In The 1920s Essay

Decent Essays

The 1920’s was the green light for expression and liberation for women. As a result of wartime effort and women filling up needed jobs that usually go for men, a societal change began to flourish. On June 4th, 1919, the 19th amendment was passed and ratified on August 18th,1920, the Women’s Suffrage Clause, which gave women the right to vote. After this, things definitely speeded up in a normal household. Women began to stray away from the title of cooking, cleaning, and watching kids. While the typical married woman would be at home on Saturday night, a woman of the 1920s was partying, wearing makeup and dressing in a way that would’ve screamed inappropriate had it been an earlier time under different circumstances. They had traded in their traditional long skirts and corsets, for something that showed a little more skin and expressed their newfound carefree …show more content…

She was financially dependant on her husband, since she did not have a job and dependant on people in general. It was socially acceptable for her to live in East Egg because of “old money” but also because she married into money, once she met Tom Buchanan. A chauvinistic, conceited, man who she was madly in love with him, whom treated her not like a human but like a possession and she continued to keep a positive attitude, with her fake oblivion towards her husband’s affair. Like Daisy had said earlier in the novel, “that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world-- a beautiful little fool.” She chose to ignore the infidelity and be one of those “beautiful little fools.” When introduced to Daisy in the first chapter, she’s presented as the typical dream girl of the 1920s. The enigmatic personality and charisma that seeps off of her, her character is most associated with purity and innocence, hence the white dresses being a symbol of her

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