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The Great Gatsby Women Analysis

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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, “The Great Gatsby” has been known to be a great read. However, is it “ok” for him to portray all of the woman's characters as carefree ladies that take advantage of men and desire only materialistic things? Or is this just another genius work of Fitzgerald's novel, making you question what's wrong with society? In the novel, women yield influence and power based on their social positions and interactions. This famous novel gives negative, stereotypical views of women in the 1920s. The Great Gatsby is ultimately about women living in a man’s world. Nick, the narrator of the novel gives a great deal of scrutiny to the women character's behavior in a way that is much more profoundly judged than the men of the novel. Furthermore, it cannot be denied that women are under a closer watch than men ever are.
Daisy Buchanan in the novel is portrayed as a “petty rich girl”. She has no obligation whatsoever. From the beginning, she is viewed as someone who flirts with all men. Every move she makes is designed to allure men. For example, she speaks really softly so that men have to get close to her to hear her. Nick says,“She’s got an indiscreet voice, I remarked. Its full of, I hesitated. Her voice is full of money, he said suddenly. That was it. I’d never understood before. It was full of money that was the inexhaustible charm that rose and fell into it, the jingle of it, the cymbals’ song of it”. Nick is judging Daisy once again by saying that her voice

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