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Freedom And Freedom In Kate Chopin's The Story Of An Hour

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Kate Chopin wrote the short story “The Story of an Hour” in the late nineteenth century. The main character, Mrs. Mallard, is a representation of all of the women of that time. Although they may be in relationships where their husbands treat them well, it is not enough. All most women want is their freedom and independence. They want to do as they please and not be dependent on their husband or their family. Women in that time were simply not allowed to be independent or have their own freedom. Before a woman is married she is known to belong to her family, and when she is married, she belongs to her husband. This is why Mrs. Mallard was actually more delighted than devastated when she heard the news of her husband being killed in a train accident. The news of her husband’s death “brings tears of release rather than of grief” (Harris). The theme of this short story is freedom and independence but at a cost. There are many shocking turns of events throughout Kate Chopin’s short story which leads to Mrs. Mallard gaining her freedom, gaining her independence, and then losing them both.
Once Mrs. Mallard learns of her husband’s death from a train accident, she soon realizes that she has finally gained her freedom; the freedom that she never had because of how women were identified more as objects than as humans in that time. Joseph Rosenblum wrote that “nothing can compensate Louise for the freedom that she lost by marrying” Mr. Mallard. Mrs. Mallard was exhausted of being in a

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