How Is Myrtle Portrayed In The Great Gatsby

496 Words2 Pages

The Great Gatsby gives us a sample of how women were portrayed. Scott describes three type of women in the novel unfaithful, masculine, and weak. Myrtle doesn't care about how hard a man works for her she cares if he has the money and how he looks. Jordan was portrayed masculine and different from the others. Women weren’t respected in the 1920’s and treated like someone owned them. F. Scott Fitzgerald uses women as characters by showing off to people their looks, background and personality. In the novel The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald, written in the 1926 illustrates how everyone just cared how much money they had and the way they looked. Myrtle didn't care about her husband who tried everything to make her happy. Myrtle was only attracted of how expensive Tom looked “He had on a dress suit and patent leather shoes and i couldn’t keep my eyes off.” Men worked to earn money for the the women. Men were most in control over women, especially in Toms situation, who defends his physical strength to control them. Women were treated as if they were clueless of things and not aware of how they are being treated. …show more content…

Even though Jordan was a girl she was described manly and did things a woman at that time wouldn’t do. Fitzgerald quotes "She was a slender, small-breasted girl, with an erect carriage, which she accentuated by throwing her body backward at the shoulders like a young cadet. Her gray sun-strained eyes looked back at me with polite reciprocal curiosity out of a wan, charming, discontented face." She was considered as a ‘flappers' smoked in public, danced the new dances, and were sexually let loose. Jordan's is a mysterious character in the novel that cause others to be interested by it. Her personality fits right in and neutral position shows her