Nick's Rumination On Women In The Great Gatsby

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Fitzgerald recognizes that the post-war woman has an economic power, and he implicitly connects this with portraying the new social and sexual freedom enjoyed by women through the lives of Daisy, Jordan Baker, and Myrtle Wilson, as well as the plentiful of young women, who go to Gatsby's gatherings (Štrba 41). Besides, his narrator Nick’s rumination on women, in the rumors of criminally surrounding the newly rich Jay Gatsby, and most explicitly, in the racism, classicism, sexuality, espoused by Tom Buchanan, whose wealth, race, and gender position him as the voice of the dominant ideology (Froehlich 81). Women are almost valueless without social status and money of men, either through hereditary or relationship in a money oriented society,

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