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How Is Edna Pontellier A Sympathetic Character

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Edna Pontellier is the main character in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening. She is a respectable woman of the 1800’s who not only acknowledges her sexual longings, but has the strength to act upon them. Edna breaks many of the rules and conventions taught by the society in which she lives. She discovers her own identity independent of her husband and children. By the end of the novel, Edna decides to commit suicide, creating the ultimate rebellion. The characterization of Edna is key to understanding the novel. As portrayed to the readers, Edna Pontellier is sympathetic character.
Edna is found at the beginning of the novel in a sort of semi-conscious state. She is comfortable in her marriage to Léonce and unaware of her own feelings and ambitions. Edna was always a hopeless romantic, enamored with men of all types. She envisioned her marriage to Léonce as the end to her old life of passion and freedom. Her married life would be the beginning of responsibility and tradition. Although she expected her dreams of romance to disappear along with her youth and proper behavior as a married woman, the passion for Robert Lebrun brought back the flames of desire once again. …show more content…

Robert creates the want and need for sexual satisfaction, art, music and freedom she no longer has in her marriage. Like a young girl, she begins to see the world from a fresh new perspective. The people Edna meets on Grand Isle awaken her desires which she could no longer bear to keep hidden inside. She soon becomes childish, failing to consider the needs and desires of anyone but herself. Edna’s desires lead her to become an independent woman. She leaves her children and husband behind to start her a chapter in her life where she can fulfill her desires and satisfy her longing to be

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