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Tess Of The DUrbervilles And The Awakening

Decent Essays

Tess of the D’urbervilles by Thomas Hardy and The Awakening by Kate Chopin were published in the late 1800s; the Victorian Time period. Hardy and Chopin explore the “sex distinction” between men and women during this time period through the eyes of female protagonists; Tess Durbeyfield and Edna Pontellier. Tess is a young, impoverished girl who seeks out her wealthy relatives to help her poor family. Edna is a young mother, and wife, that goes through a series of “awakenings” to become an active member of society. Throughout each storyline, both characters are compared to Greek and Roman goddesses to portray the Victorian ideal of women, which was for them to be pure and perfect.
Initially, Tess and all the other women participating in Cerealia, the celebration of the Roman goddess Ceres, are dressed in all white to portray their innocence and femininity. Ceres is the goddess of fertility, motherhood, and women, which is why there are so many women at this festival of all ages. This festival is usually celebrated around mid-late April with the actual festival on the 19th, which can be assumed the time of year at the beginning of the story. However,‘no two whites were alike;’‘some had a bluish pallor,’ while others had a ‘cadaverous tint’ (Hardy 18). This can represent that all these women are different and presented at different stages in their lives. On the other hand, Tess “wore a red ribbon in her hair”(Hardy 10) unlike the other women. Hardy could be foreshadowing the

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