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Women In The Great Gatsby

Decent Essays

The period after World War 1 marked a time of change in women’s rights and their lifestyles, as they gained more freedom and were allowed actions that they were never permitted by society before. Women became more independent. In the novel The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald portrayed Jordan as an independent woman as she did not have a need to depend on any men like Daisy and Myrtle. Women also gained more rights through the Women Suffrage movement, and acquired more freedom that was never tolerable before in society. Not only did women gain more rights in the 1920s, they also began to have a life outside of their traditional domestic role, which was represented in female characters like Myrtle. Although women had gained more power and freedom, …show more content…

Women began to care more about themselves rather than their families and their place in society. After the world war, came a time of poverty in which the majority of the population had suffered from. Myrtle Wilson is wife to a poor man named George Wilson, who owned a run down garage in The Valley of Ashes. In the novel, the Valley of Ashes represented the moral and social decline of society. Myrtle often lied to her husband and cheated on him with Tom Buchanan because she wanted to break away from her social class. An example of when she tried to show that she belonged in a higher class is when she stated, “’I told that boy about the ice.’ Myrtle raised her eyebrows in despair at the shiftlessness of the lower orders. ‘These people! You have to keep after them all the time’” (Fitzgerald 32). This shows how Myrtle wants to be treated as an upper class person with social status and the fact that she wants to break away from her low class state. Not only did women care more about themselves and their social status, but also they were not as faithful towards their children and husbands. Daisy, visibly hurt from her husband’s infidelities, had projected her pain onto Gatsby as he showed her genuine love that her husband never gave her. The fact that she left Gatsby at the end of the novel, after he was “sacrificed” for her deed showed that she did not love Gatsby as much as he had loved her and that she was only using him to make up for her loss of love that she never acquired from Tom. In addition, the novel had mentioned that Daisy and Tom had a daughter but Daisy too drenched in her own wounds, does not seem to care for her child and leaves the responsibilities to the maid. In conclusion, as women started to break out from their traditional familial roles, many women came to care more about themselves, which may cause them to be two-timing to their

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