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The Lost Generation In The Great Gatsby

Decent Essays

The 1920’s was the age of a dramatic social and political change. World War I ended 1918 just two years before this dramatic change and the economy was booming, emerging America as the new world superpower. The start of today's modern values was taking place. More people lived in cities like New York and Chicago, worked higher order jobs of that like a police officer or lawyer, the popularity of the car and traveling places were in a constant uprise, and the typical view of women had changed. Most women moved from a more conservative fashion to that of what is known as a flapper. Their hair was short, they wore shorter flowy dresses and got rid of the corset to get a more boy like figure erasing the typical feminine shape. Along with all of the dramatic political and social changes, there was the creation of the Lost Generation. A term given to the generation that reached maturity during or just after the war. This term encompassed writers like Gertrude Stein, Ernest Hemingway, Agatha Christie, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Most of them rejected the post-war values of America, believing in a general loss in values, the idea of hope was gone, and most of their books were based on societal flaws. One of the best representations of writings from the Lost Generation is F. Scott Fitzgerald’s book The Great Gatsby. Through this book Fitzgerald mocks the American dream, saying that those who pursue this dream can never be fully satisfied because the American dream requires always

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