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Identity And Feminism In The Awakening

Decent Essays

Identity and feminism, complex themes that have survived the ages from Kate Chopin’s work The Awakening. The protagonist, Edna Pontellier, breaks many of the Victorian cultural era norms, exploring these themes and influencing society’s perception of women. For these reasons The Awakening is a novel of immense merit and should continue to be taught in an AP Literature course. Throughout the novel, Edna Pontellier questions her identity and roles as a woman and as a mother. In Edna’s Creole society, she does not fit the mold of a “mother-woman”(8). Mother-women are mothers before they are women; they wholly devote themselves to their children and husbands. Edna, although, a loving mother does not solely base her life around her children like …show more content…

One of her first acts defying society is stopping her Tuesday appointments. By doing so she decides what she believes is enjoyable and important and not what her husband wants, “She completely abandoned her Tuesdays at home…lending herself to any passing caprice”(57). She then further emancipates herself from her husband by moving out of his house using the money that she earned. By moving out of her husband’s house and supporting her life in the pigeon house, she demonstrates that she is an independent woman that does not have to depend on man to live. Edna also moves out of the house without consulting her husband or needing his approval. By doing this she feels empowered, “like the feeling of freedom and independence”(80). Finally, her sexual affair with Alcee Arobin is the pinnacle expression of her freedom as a woman and freedom over her body. She freely chooses to go into the affair, going against every belief and perception of Victorian era Creole women. She, a married woman, chooses to feel okay to have an outside affair that lets her feel passionate and sate her desire, “It was the first kiss of her life to which her nature had really responded. It was a flaming torch that kindled

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