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Searching For Meaning By Kate Chopin

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Searching for Meaning, in the Water.

The author, Jane Austen once said “I hate to hear you talk about all women as if they were fine ladies instead of rational creatures. None of us want to be in calm waters all our lives.” The Awakening by Kate Chopin depicts the life of a woman who wants more than to be viewed by society as a good wife and mother. Kate Chopin was brought up in the late 1800’s, a time that was extremely prejudiced towards women. It was this mighty prejudice that fueled her desire to write novels depicting female characters, attempting, and ultimately failing, to break the societal molds much as she had her whole life. One of the key aspects of this novella was the ending, when Edna chose death over living in a world where she would be unable to express her true self. This leaves readers with many considerations to contemplate about the true torments in the lives of women of this male dominated society. In the awakening, Edna is enlightened to the fact that she cannot be the true keeper of her body, she is unable to enjoy her passions with the pressures of her role as mother, she cannot connect with her domestic peers, and cannot love the man she wishes to; this all pushes her to her only option of leaving the world she cannot exist in while maintaining her true self.

Edna was born in a time where a women’s sole purpose was to get married, have children and please their husband. This is exemplified when Edna’s husband, Leonce , comes home and instead of

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