Bernice Bobs Her Hair Analysis

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Innovating Women: a woman’s reading of “Bernice Bobs Her Hair”
Reading is an experience of art; without readers’ interaction, the meaning of any literary work is insufficient. “[Norman] Holland believes that we react to literary texts with the same psychological responses we bring to our daily life....That is, in various ways we unconsciously recreate in the text the world that exists in our mind.” (Tyson, 182) By telling a story that centers on the conflicts between two wealth young females whose personalities are distinctly different in the jazz age, Fitzgerald leads us on a journey of physical, and especially psychological transition of the protagonists through an omniscient narration. For female individuals, a tale emphasis on the youth, …show more content…

The feature “Bernice Bobs Her Hair” is collected in Fitzgerald’s book Flapper and Philosophy that published in 1920. Flapper, “a ‘new breed’ of young Western women in the 1920s who wore short skirts, bobbed their hair, listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for what was then considered acceptable behavior.”(Wikipedia, par. 1) For readers from different cultural background, their understandings of the story are considerably different. For example, a woman brought up in a conservative culture, she probably believes marriages are “tiresome colorless,” and wishes to be a “beautiful bundle of [cloth]” that has no own mind. (Fitzgerald, 7) In turn, her interpretation of reading is truly subjective and could be misreading. Flappers are symbols of liberation, feminism and the powers of women. By doing what exactly Marjorie says, (praising males, announcing the plan of bobbing her hair, making bold, humorous and fresh remakes), Bernice becomes well liked. In a modern western woman’s eye, “Bernice Bobs Her Hair” illustrated a transformation of a traditional, boring country girl to a modern, flipper, pleasure-seeking woman who liberate herself from the suppression of their male counterparts. “Twenty minutes later….Her hair was not curly, and now it lay in lank lifeless blocks on the both sides of her suddenly …show more content…

As a female university student, I feel deeply related to Marjorie since her personality is quietly similar to mine. Analogously, I could feel Bernice’s “vague pain” (Fitzgerald, 3) and realize her sensitivity as the things have happened to me when I was younger. In order to comprehend author’s main idea, I did numerous researches about the jazz age. Thus it can be seen, reader’s background is also crucial when responding to this literary texts. The writer’s main target audiences are women, who have different desires and needs than men. The meaning of the text often competes when we have a better understanding of our self-identities. We interpret the text based on our own psyches, experiences, and judgments. Literature, are like music, without interaction with its audiences, no profound meaning would be

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