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Jenna Pelonero Mrs. Fontanilla Pd. 3/4 17 March Introduction Paragraphs Whenever people get into relationships, they expect a lot from their partner. In fact, most studies show that most couples expect their partners to love them unconditionally. However, this is not always the case, as most women in relationships can be sexually or physically abused and most men see them just as mere objects which are supposed to be possessed. Because of such oppression from their husbands, the wives could just end up being ignorant and submissive, willing to follow their husbands anywhere and do anything because they haven’t known anything else in life, and wouldn’t know what to do with themselves otherwise.
In his book, The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald’s writing explores how women are viewed in relationships. He uses two characters, Tom who is a millionaire and Daisy Buchanan, who is his wife. The author says that every time the couple had disagreements, Tom could buy his wife a necklace (Fitzgerald 5). This was because he viewed women as weak minded who can be bought just like an object. In addition, Tom was so possessive, he did not want his wife to talk to other men. While on the other hand, A Doll’s House by Ibsen shows the other half, of how a woman is materialistic, and shallow minded.
According to Ibsen, Nora and Torvald Helmer had been married for seven years, however, they had a rough marriage (Ibsen 2). This was because Norah felt that marriage laws are made by men. She argued that the judicial system did support women because some judges carried out their sentences based on the gender of the accused. In fact, the story ends by Norah divorcing Helmer, a blow to both his ego and reputation as a man. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald and A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen, the authors explore idea of the easy-to-objectify, weak minded woman, as seen by the possessiveness towards women, materialistic and shallow traits, and how the men know best.
ConclusionIt is worth to note from the two literary works that the gender issue is explored with much attention given on the picture of women in the society. The position of women in the society has been a contentious issue with significant number of men having the belief that they are lesser beings that can be used to satisfy the personal greed of men. On the other hand, women are presented as manipulative in respect to their seductive power to compel men to provide for their needs in exchange for sexual favors and emotional satisfaction.
In the book The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald’s assertion of women as mere objects of satisfaction to the male dominated and patriarch society is convincing. This is a common phenomenon in various communities where men believe women are materialistic and can always be influenced to comply when offered gift. This idea as presented through Tom and Daisy is a clear reflection of the submissive nature of women. In the case of A Doll’s House by Henrik Ibsen, it is evident that women are materialistic and rarely love unconditionally.
Besides, women are portrayed as weak-minded a concept that is evident in the nature of decisions they make out of limited logic. There is a point of convergence in the two books that the society still look at women as incompetent to make informed choices, weak-minded and materialistic hence the need for the intervention of men to own and guide them in various social issues in the society.
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