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Womanhood In The Great Gatsby

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Relief from the trenches. Rebellion in the streets. The American Dream. And shorter skirts. The 1920s is an age of change where you chose to exchange the corsets and ankle-length dresses of a Victorian age for tassel skirts, pixie cuts, and scandalous smoking as newfound “dames” in society. The era of the redefinition of woman are on the rise, through “The Great Gatsby,” F. Scott Fitzgerald is one of the first to prove that there is more to a woman than meets the eye. Not only does Fitsgerald address the different aspects of a new womanhood; but also he contrasts the preconceived notions of sexual stereotype’s with the new “dames” of the Roaring Twenties and shows the attempts to escape this. For Jordan Baker, he becomes a famous golfer, a relatively popular male sport; rather than choose to be the innocent and feminine ideal form the past, the role of individual is more appealing to Jordan, who can be more masculine and distant from society than the average woman of her age should be. Daisy Buchanan is seen as Toms wife, Pammy’s mother, and a woman whom is stereotyped as innocent and reserved. hidden from the others however, Nick hints to the reader of a different side to Daisy, a side where they are smarter than they seem and think outside the old-money mold in which …show more content…

unlike this Victorien woman, Jordan baker is seemingly the opposite of everything expected of her, rather than be gentle, Jordan possess an air of confidence which overpowers Nick Carraway. “He was almost surprised into murmuring an apology for having disturbed her.” (Fitzgerald 8) Throughout their whole introduction, Jordans chin never lowers from her confidant state, and though she nods hello, she “quickly [tips] her head back again” into her perfect posture with uplifted chin. I think her independence is

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