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The Standards Of Society In The House Of The Spirits By Isabel Allende

Decent Essays

It is often said that we are shaped by our environments; we all interact with our surroundings in some form or another, and we are further influenced by and interact with the society we live in. In fiction, characters interact the same way within their fictional societies and social positions, as characters reflect how actual people relate to their world. In the novel The House of the Spirits by Isabel Allende, there exist many societal norms and standards that influence the characters and their actions in different ways. This essay focuses on these standards and how they relate to the character of Férula Trueba, and her position in the society she lives in. Allende’s novel The House of the Spirits takes place in the religious and patriarchal society of 20th Century Chile, where the character Férula embraces religious austerity and internalizes her role as caretaker, resulting in embitterment and repression of her feelings.
The setting of the novel begins in the early 20th century, in the Capital, where both the del Valle family and the Trueba family reside. The Capital is inferred to be in the country of Chile. Many of the standards of the society are first shown through the del Valle family and the central character, Esteban Trueba. It is clear that this society emphasizes reputation and morality, and that it is deeply religious; Severo del Valle is atheist, but both him and his family attend Catholic Mass because he “could not allow himself the luxury of missing the

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