Throughout history women have to overcome many setbacks. They experienced numerous abuses in changing how women dress, act, and participate in activities outside the home. In the 1920s, the role of women changed dramatically. This change brings women new freedoms in labor, family, and fashion. It is said that women who used new opportunities and independence in the 1920s were robbed. Boarding lifestyle is a professional golfer and is most commonly seen by Jordan Baker, friend of Daisy Buchanan of The Great Gatsby.
The role of women in "Great Gatsby" novel "The Great Gatsby" took place in the 1920s. According to the newly born American dream, the age of rebellion and life. Women of this age are depicted in two different ways in the novel: provocation and foolishness. In the 1920s women began to move towards society, and the novel explored these phenomena. - The depiction of women in "Great Gatsby" is due to the social concept, and the classification of women is different from that of men. Women have always been considered "weak", this is to obey men and please please. This situation has changed and now there is relative equality between men and women, but it has been surprising that women's figures began to undergo major changes over the past 100 years and that discrimination has been done in this century.
Women of American literature who slandered "Great Gatsby" and "Istanbul Ladies" played an important role in American literature. Unfortunately, this role is often negative, there is no reason to do so. Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome and F. Scott Fitzgerald's "great Gatsby" is an example of inevitable destruction of American literature. In "Great Gatsby", Fitzgerald showed three women in particularly bad condition. Narrator's ... self-consciousness, unknown center, Daisy Foe Buchanan, regardless of whether it is realized or not, our idea inevitably surrounds it. Please compare the theme of Dickinson's poet # 315 and Poe's "Ligia". Since death is believed to exist forever in human life - the theme of philosophical death of death always existed in American writings - from the early colonial diaries.