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Edith Wharton's The Age Of Innocence

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Third Person Limited Omniscient Point of view: One of the Most Effective Way to Represent the theme of the Social Pressure The Age of Innocence (1920) by Edith Wharton is a retrospective story which depicts the high-class society of New York in 1870s where the protagonist, Newland Archer struggles to decide his path between his own desire and the social ideologies. Newland defies the social norm by the scandal of immoral conduct with an insubordinate woman even if it affects his livelihood and social status extremely. However, he ironically determines to follow the social norm by choosing his family over Ellen Olenska in the epilogue. The theme of Archer’s conflict between himself and the society that surrounds him is revealed more evidently …show more content…

Even though there is nothing that prevents him to go with his desire at the end of the story, he ultimately adheres to the social conventions. The third person omniscient narrator exhibits the irony of Archer’s ultimate decision in the epilogue of the literature effectively. Because the narrator conveys the story from Newland’s point of view, readers are driven by the narrator and only get to see the story through Newland’s eyes. Through this perspective, readers prospect May to be the most “innocent” and naïve ideal archetype of the upper class in 1870s in New York while Ellen to be a pariah of the society with perverted. Nonetheless, it turns out that May is not innocent at the end of the story when it is proven that May has lied to Ellen about her pregnancy. Therefore, it turns out that Archer’s point of view was innocent by only looking at peoples’ apparent images while others knew the reality and truth of peoples. By developing the story based on Archer’s point of view, who turns out to be the most innocent, readers have been misled of the reality until the end. By doing so, it enhances the irony of the innocence by delaying the juncture of showing the reality of the entire story which affects his ultimate determination. His weakling feature that has been developed throughout the entire story becomes evident in the epilogue at the point when he concludes with his ironic

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