The Great Gatsby Role Of Women In The 1920s

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In the Great Gatsby by Scott Fitzgerald, mirrors women in the 1920’s. They were known as flappers, they were young women who wore short skirts, bobbed their hair, listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for what was then considered acceptable behavior. They began to grow more independent. This changed the role of the women’s in the 1920’s. In the 1920’s during World War 1, when men were at war the women's had to take the jobs of men. That was dangerous and the jobs of men. Women had to work on farms, in engineering, in highly dangerous munitions industries and many more. The influence and expectations of women's, and their roles in society, increased during the 1920’s. After the war ended, more jobs came open to women's. These jobs included, teaching, nurses, typists, and more. Even when men came back from the war, women's continued to stay in the workforce. Then they were known as the “New Women”, they had been given the right to vote, they were able to obtain college degrees, learned to drive and went to work. …show more content…

As war-weary Americans wanted to enjoy themselves and began to value convenience and leisure over hard work and self denial”. This led to characterizing by technological advances and new labor saving inventions that also led to the large scale use of automatic mobiles, telephones, the radio, motion pictures, and electricity. People challenged traditional ideas and the new morality, personal freedom, personified by the fashions and lifestyles of the “flappers” who danced the Charleston of the new music of the Jazz Age of the city

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