Bernice Bobs Her Hair (F
Bernice Bobs Her Hair (F. Scot
"Bernice Bobs Her Hair" by F. Scott Fitzgerald teaches a very important lesson about superficial popularity, and the cruel pressures which demand that individuals conform to the standards of a social set. It was interesting to watch the development of the main character, a quiet, passive person who longed for popularity, then found it, then lost it, and finally became strong and independent. The story is about an eighteen-year old girl named Bernice who is visiting her snobbish cousin, Marjorie. At first, Bernice is considered boring and dull by Marjorie and her friends, because she can't make witty conversation and doesn't dress fashionably. Bernice finally agrees to let Marjorie teach her how to be popular. According to Marjorie's superficial formula for popularity, conversation must be carefully planned and rehearsed in order to shock and amuse the audience. For conversational purposes, Marjorie suggests that Bernice use the topic of bobbing her hair. In 1920, when the story was written, short hair was a daring new fashion, adopted by only the most adventurous women, and it had the power to shock the average person. Jealous of Bernice's new popularity, Marjorie sets a trap for Bernice by calling her bluff on the hair bob. Although the new hair style was immensely unflattering to Bernice, and her popularity evaporated immediately, the bob unleashed a strong, independent side of her character . Bernice decided to leave her cousin's house and go home, but before she left, she snipped off Marjorie's long blonde braids.
The two most important characters in this story are Bernice and Marjorie. The theme of superficial popularity and social pressure is conveyed through the contrast and development of the two characters, and the changes in their relationship. Bernice was quiet, socially awkward, and "pretty, with dark hair and high color, but she was no fun on a party." Her vivacious and popular cousin, Marjorie, "besides having a fairylike face and a dazzling, bewildering tongue was already justly celebrated for having turned five cart-wheels in succession during the past pump-and-slipper dance at New Haven." Marjorie had a wide circle of friends, which included a large number of admiring men. On the other hand, Bernice's limited social success was based on the fact that her family was the richest in her home town, and her mother constantly threw parties for her and had bought her a car. She couldn't understand why Marjorie and her friends didn't like her.
Bernice valued friendship, but Marjorie "had no female intimates - she considered girls stupid." Bernice was the kind of conservative, old-fashioned "womanly woman" that Marjorie despised. Marjorie's relationships were superficial. She did not love Warren because "when she was away from him she forgot him and had affairs with other boys." Marjorie amused herself by writing "non-committal, marvelously elusive letters" to her many boyfriends.
Both characters...
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