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Compare how the themes of identity and reputation are presented in Angela Carter’s ‘The Magic Toyshop’, William Shakespeare’s ‘Much Ado About Nothing’, and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘The Great Gatsby’ $11.09   Add to cart

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Compare how the themes of identity and reputation are presented in Angela Carter’s ‘The Magic Toyshop’, William Shakespeare’s ‘Much Ado About Nothing’, and F. Scott Fitzgerald’s ‘The Great Gatsby’

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A 3,000+ word essay exploring the themes of identity and reputation in The Magic Toyshop, Much Ado About Nothing, and The Great Gatsby, drawing comparisons between the three texts. It achieved an A+ grade for an A2 piece of coursework.

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  • August 28, 2021
  • 11
  • 2015/2016
  • Essay
  • Unknown
  • A+
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Nicole Pinborough

Compare how the themes of identity and reputation are presented in Angela Carter’s

‘The Magic Toyshop’, William Shakespeare’s ‘Much Ado About Nothing’, and F. Scott

Fitzgerald’s ‘The Great Gatsby’


Nicole Pinborough


Identity and reputation are significant themes explored throughout these three

texts, with each reflecting the subtle difference in the significance of social standings due

to the context in which they were written. Shakespeare’s ‘Much Ado About Nothing,’

published in 1600, reflects the social expectations of female sexual purity in the 16th

century and how it was a vital element in dictating a woman’s reputation. If a woman was

to engage in premarital sexual relations, if this was discovered she risked being shamed

and outcast by society due to this loss of reputation, even if no child was conceived. The

extent to which she would be penalised would be dependent on her class; a member of the

aristocracy could not be seen behaving in this manner and an incident would not only

bring shame to her, but would humiliate her family. Conversely, in the 1920s and the ‘Jazz

Age’ of Fitzgerald, exists friction between the newly wealthy, with their self-made money,

and the aristocracy who represented the old values. The gaudiness and ostentatious

nature of West Egg highlights the lack of respect for the newly wealthy and the

discrepancy between them and the valued reputation of the aristocratic ‘old money’ of

East Egg. Carter’s ‘The Magic Toyshop,’ published in 1967, however, questions the

differences between the genders and their contrasting expectations, presenting this debate

in a parodied form. Using magical realism she comments upon the influence of the

patriarchy over women and girls of a young age, becoming one of the major English

women writers of her time, highlighting many feminist issues that are still being

conquered today.


1

, Nicole Pinborough

The way in which a character is established is of great importance, allowing the

reader to be introduced to themes and characterisation. Fitzgerald in particular employs

this technique to create a sense of mystery shrouding one of the principal characters, Jay

Gatsby. Despite being the eponymous character of the novel, Gatsby’s first lines do not

feature until halfway through the third chapter; before that he is only the subject of

speculation among other characters, and is glimpsed by Nick, who forms the peripheral

narrator, reaching out ‘towards the dark water.’ Fitzgerald, in delaying the entrance of

Gatsby, mirrors the confusion of the reader with the character’s shadowed past, which

causes rumour among those who attend his parties. Wild speculations of Gatsby’s past are

revealed to Nick, and in turn the reader, throughout the text, with characters believing ‘he

killed a man once,’ was a German spy, and an ‘Oxford man.’ As the novel progresses

Fitzgerald deconstructs the aura of fantasy he created around Gatsby, disclosing different

layers of the truth through Nick and gradually demythologising the ‘great’ concept of

Gatsby, finally revealing his criminal past.


In a similar fashion to Gatsby, Hero, the romantic heroine from ‘Much Ado About

Nothing’, is conscious of how she presents herself. Shakespeare could be seen as

characterising her as a meek, obedient woman, evident in the quantity of lines she is given

and how she is submissive to her father. Leonato, in Act Two Scene One, informs his

daughter of the Prince’s intention to marry her and also of her reaction; despite the

benevolent tone, the imperative, ‘you know your answer,’ highlights the extent to which

women had very little choice, not only of whom to marry, but in their everyday lives.

Whilst Hero does not object outwardly to her father’s decision, her silence could be

interpreted as defiance; it is possible that Hero rejects this order yet is unable to do so

within the constraints of society’s expectations for women and so remains silent to

maintain her desirable public appearance. Although Hero is presented as an embodiment

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