To get start the “The Story of an Hour “was a good shorty story it’s a bit different but over all a good read. It starts off tell you the most important part of the story and something really tragic happened to her husband and the family friend and her sister is going to tell her because she has a bad heart problem. They need to tell her or she could die because the problem with her heart is so bad that a shock like that could kill her. So they race to get there so both can tell they get there and tell her and she storms off to her room they think she is broke hearted and she could die. But little did they know she like the that she was free from the marriage that she was stuck over the years she stop loving her husband and she wanted more than anything in the world to be free from that man she was going to spend the rest of her life with. So when the sister and the family friend got there they were tell her that her husband was in a tragic accident and his name was on top the list of missing people. She stormed off to her room and they were trying to get her out of the room because they are scared that she could die because of the heart problem that she has. She was look out …show more content…
She felt all that freedom the she got snatched any from her hand and her heart could not take and she died there. Well she had the her problem if there was to much shock she could die and the shock of the freedom slipped away from her that was so close that her heart could not take and gave out. They sister and the family friend and the husband called the doctor to check her out and they said and I quote “they said she died of a disease – of over joy that killed her.” But as the reader you know batter then that she died because she seen her husband and the freedom she felt was gone never to be in reach ever
Focusing on her future freedoms she was interrupted at the door by her husband. There had been a mix up and Mr. Mallard was nowhere near the train accident. Mrs. Mallard’s heart condition could not take the weight of change and she passed away.
But I truly respect women and believe us men aren’t anything with out them. Image Obama without
However, the story ends with Mrs Mallard’s freedom being ripped away from her as she dies from shock upon seeing her husband walk through the door. When the doctors come to pronounce her dead, they said “she had died of heart disease, … the joy that kills”. This is foreshadowed that the beginning of the story when it is said that Mrs Mallard “was afflicted with heart trouble”. Also this use of irony suggests how the male ideology of the doctors is foolish and misplaced.
In “The Autonomous Female Self and the Death of Louise Mallard in Kate Chopin’s ‘Story of an Hour,’” Mark Cunningham expresses his opinion on how he believes Mrs. Mallard dies in Chopin’s short story. “The Story of an Hour” was written in the late 1890s, during a time when it was controversial for women to be independent. The ending of her story has created somewhat of a dilemma among readers for years. Some people conclude one ending based on the details and clues Chopin wrote throughout the story, while others come up with a totally different opinion. Mark Cunningham writes a brilliant article on his view of the story’s ending, where he clearly conveys his take on Louis Mallard’s death. Although there are many times when he repeats the same information, Cunningham makes good use of textual evidence and authorities, as well as logic, which makes it easy to agree with his claim.
Jeannette falls out the side door of the car and tumbles down a hill, she was bleeding from her nose and bruised up her knees.This was when they were returning from a casino.
Most stories have more than one conflict, some bigger than others, but all important as a story progressives to the very moment everything clicks and comes together. After that point, the story starts to wind down, lose ends are tied, and the reader gets the satisfying feeling of a happy ending. The Story of an Hour is not your typical short story; but is similar to others in the way that conflicts are the leading force behind a short story. This story starts with Mrs. Mallard finding out any wife’s worst news and realizing it is the best news she has ever heard. Within the short hour of the announcement, the news that was going to save her, ended up killing her. The internal conflicts Mrs. Mallard faces in Chopin’s The Story of an Hour are subtle, but lead to a resolution that makes the reader question if they believe the author or not.
The Story of an Hour, the first short story starts out with a sick wife who was told that her husband died. She is sad at first, but then realizes that she is free from her husband and wants to finally go out and travel the world. The irony of the story is that she ends up actually dying of happiness then she is carried down her steps from her room and she sees her husband coming home alive and well. The story is told in third person and is pretty depressing, using situational
“The Story of an Hour” is a great portrayal of how married women felt during the 1870s. This story is a serious representation of how difficult it was to get divorced during that time. Throughout this short story, a woman by the name of Louise Mallard rejoices at the news of her husband’s death. Due to her disappointment of seeing that her husband had not actually passed, Mrs. Mallard dies. One might question why she was overjoyed by that upsetting news; however, she was justified in feeling cheerful. In this story, Mrs. Mallard states numerous times how she felt “free”. Having this mindset after hearing her husband had passed one has reason to believe Mrs. Mallard and her husband’s marriage was not a
However, when she went to her room alone to compose herself, she felt a bit have happiness as she realized she could be free. She had great hope for her new future where she would not be held back by someone and could do anything she wanted. Before her husband had supposedly died, she did not want to live a long life, but with this new freedom, she wanted to live for a long time to
Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour,” published in 1894, is a masterfully succinct story in which Chopin presents a glimpse of how marriage played a repressive force in the lives of women during the Victorian Era by highlighting the tumultuous last hour of protagonist Louise Mallard’s life. Similarly, James Thurber’s wonderfully whimsical “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty,” published in 1939, illustrates a comparable, yet gendered opposite, perspective of marriage from the escapist titular protagonist. Both literary works share a common theme of oppressive marriage, although the gender roles are presented as true to the era in which they were respectively written, emphasizing the evolution of gender role in marriage over time. Chopin’s short story was written in an era of early women’s rights revolution, whilst the stereotypical wife
In "Girl" by Jamaica Kincaid, an older person, who perhaps appears to be the young girl's mother, starts to demonstrate to a young girl how to do certain tasks and then later seems to be scolding the girl because she, the mother, believes that the child is growing up to be a "slut" (355). In "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin, the author writes about how a repressed Mrs. Louise Mallard, who learns about the alleged death of her husband, finally breaks free from being controlled by him, but at the end, her husband comes back home unharmed and Louise dies along with her relinquished freedom. Both texts revolve around the loss of sense of freedom of Mrs. Louise Mallard and the girl. Although the characters come from different cultures and are
So one day they decided to go out to eat breakfast before heading on the road, and as they were eating the tv turn on and a picture of Shaylne pops up and the new reporter says “ you may not believe this but police think they have found Ana Maxwell...” and immediately Shaylene stabs John in the hand and escapes with her daughter in his car. Shelby is super confused at this moment, as her mom drives to a near cabin, once they enter Shelby sees a computer, so she waits for her mom to fall asleep until she gets on it and searches up Ana Maxwell. Turns out that she is a women that had murdered her husband a couple years back, she begins to slowly believe it as she puts all the pieces together. She thinks that maybe this is the reason why her mom never spoke about her father or why he supposably left her when Shelby was just a baby. After a while she spoke to her mom about it and turns out that he supposably abused her when they were together and he would make her life terrible so she had to take some
The boys find her drugged and trapped in a room with someone from their past. Someone they both want to forget.
The Story if an Hour by Kate Chopin was a very interesting story and represents the type of stories I like to read. It starts off with detail descriptions, so I can imagine every event in my head. It shows crazy emotions within the story, from sad to happy, to shockingly sad, and an ultimately shocking ending. Also, I liked the fact that I can relate to one or two of the characters for instance, Mrs. Mallard’s sister Josephine.
The terror, which would not end for another twenty-eight years – if it ever did end – began, so far as I know or can tell, with a boat made from a sheet of newspaper floating down a gutter swollen with rain.