“This …show more content…
Daisy Buchanan, Jordan Baker, and Myrtle Wilson. Daisy Buchanan, as the book said was the “Golden Girl” every man could fall in love with her. We also have Jordan Baker, a golfer, she was considered the “new women” in this book she was a liar, competitive and very self-centered like Nick described her,“her chin raised a little, as if she were balancing something on it which was quite likely to fall,” (8). Then we have Myrtle Wilson who was described very different than Daisy and Jordan. “ In a moment the thickish figure of a women blocked out the light from the office door: (25) It was very unusual for women at this time to be thick it was more about slim boyish figures. “..faintly stout, but she carried her surplus flesh sensuously as some women can.” (25) This is trying to say that Myrtle was confident which is one of the major things that changed in a woman 's mind in the 20s. When Nick described Jordan and Daisy he said they were wearing a white dress but then when it comes to Myrtle she had on a “spotted dress of dark blue crepe-de-chine.” We can see how there was still a difference in women and how Fitzgerald describe each one of them with their …show more content…
Many of them were known as flappers. A woman 's figure in the 20s was about being slim and flat chested basically a boyish figure. Now they would wear a lot of short skirts and dresses. This was something that wasn 't allowed before they had overthrown the expectations of what they had to wear. “College girls, unmarried girls living at home, and independent office workers most frequently presented themselves as flappers.” (Women in the 1920s North Carolina) When I say shorter dresses is not what short is today but back then short was considered knee length or above just a little which older generations found absolutely