Gender Roles In The Great Gatsby

Words: 1411
Pages: 6

The men in the book, The Great Gatsby, — excluding Nick— show their worst immoral livelihood while also deeming themselves perfect. The men use their deceitful ways to get ahead forcing the women of the book to mirror that immoral balance just to live in a world dedicated to men. Fitzgerald does this to prove a point about women and to women during the 1920’s. The men in the book pose a very strong immoral presents that the women adopt in order to achieve the great success of the American dream whether it is through being objectified or objectification of themselves or others. Gatsby in, The Great Gatsby, uses immoral tactics to achieve his dream. In chapter nine after Gatsby’s death his father brings Nick a book and written inside is a schedule Gatsby made when he was younger. The schedule is a hardworking moral plan for Gatsby to get rich but when the moral way wasn’t fast …show more content…
It is seen in chapter 2 that Myrtle buys incredibly useless things to put in her apartment and a very loud and gaudy dress. This emphasizes the transformation from a normal person to a figure of new money. Her transformation shows her American Dream of being old money, like Daisy. Myrtle is flaunted by Tom as his mistress like a possession, his scholarly books. Although Tom flaunts her around town it’s shown when they are taking the train to her apartment that Tom doesn’t want to be in the same train car as her. Tom doesn’t wants to flaunt Myrtle he wants to flaunt the idea of having a mistress. More possession is shown when George locks Myrtle in the room after finding our she was cheating. He hides her away and locks her up as if she’s a belonging of his. Myrtle cannot be anything but a possession to these two men and even to others Myrtle isn’t a person. After Myrtle’s death Jordan continues with the day as if someone didn’t just die: Jordan acts like Myrtle’s death was a small uneventful bump in her