Women tend to function in the narratives of the shorts as devices for conflict or Keaton's love interests.
However, in One Week, Sybil Seely has a much stronger role, she is his equal - as the 2 characters work to build and retain the house together. Still, she reinforces trad. gender roles as she cooks breakfast while Keaton attempts to build the house.
Keaton also acknowledges the voyeuristic role of the camera in the sequence where Seely takes a bath, his hand appearing to cover the lens as if to protect her modesty. Seely also breaks the fourth wall by smiling at the camera, aware she is being watched.
Keaton also acknowledges social changes of the time, with the line of "i don't cate how she votes. I'm going to marry her" in Scarecrow - referencing the success of women's suffrage, as most American states had granted women full voting rights by the end of 1919.
In Cops, Keaton's girlfriend is represented as snobbish and cruel - serving as a plot device, as her rejection of Keaton leads him into a series of mishaps.
To an extent, the naïve and childlike characters played in silent comedy defy trad. masculine roles - e.g. One Week, where Keaton struggles to conform to these as he is unable to build a home for his wife or cope with the most basic of tasks.
Keaton's attempts to construct the ideal home in One Week links to Ford Motor Companies documentary that demonstrates how ford workers can build their own affordable, pre-fabricated homes. It undercuts these notions (and expanding consumer culture of the time) as Keaton struggles to build this reportedly easy-assembly home.
The house in scarecrow was a reference to comic illustrations by Rube Goldberg - he drew characters surrounded by crazy contraptions as a comment on how devices can often confuse and complicate rather than facilitate our lives.
Keaton also references cubism for comedic affect - e.g. in One Week, the house takes on a cubist form, resembling an abstract angular face, with the roof as a tiny hate while the pickets on the front porch resemble large teeth.
Keaton uses surrealism style for comical purposes - like the over-sized newspaper gag in High Sign deifies the norms of the real world, appearing to open like a magic trick.
The use of outdoor locations and natural lighting are in the realist mode (in recognisable locations, such as the streets of L.A or the fairground) , while the surreal gags and elaborate sets are more expressionistic and surrealist.