Awakening Women Essay

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    ever wondered what the lifestyles of Nineteenth Century women were like? Were they independent, career women or were they typical housewives that cooked, clean, watched the children, and catered to their husbands. Did the women of this era express themselves freely or did they just do what society expected of them? Kate Chopin was a female author who wrote several stories and two novels about women. One of her renowned works of art is The Awakening. This novel created great controversy and received negative

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    Kate Chopin’s The Awakening recounts Edna Pontellier’s journey to self-discovery and independence, in a society where women are supposed to be proper and dependent. In chapter VI of The Awakening, Kate Chopin uses imagery of light and the ocean to describe her awakening and foreshadow the end of Edna’s journey to independence, and ultimately, her death. Chapter VI begins with Edna’s realization that she is her own being, after not agreeing to go to the beach with Robert, even though she desired

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    the meadow in Kentucky, symbols and settings in The Awakening are prominent and provide a deeper meaning than the text does alone. Throughout The Awakening by Kate Chopin, symbols and setting recur representing Edna’s current progress in her awakening. The reader can interpret these and see a timeline of Edna’s changes and turmoil as she undergoes her changes and awakening. The setting Edna is in directly affects her temperament and awakening: Grand Isle provides her with a sense of freedom; New

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    Symbolism in Kate Chopin's The Awakening Chopin's The Awakening is full of symbolism.  Rather than hit the reader on the head with blunt literalism, Chopin uses symbols to relay subtle ideas.  Within each narrative segment, Chopin provides a symbol that the reader must fully understand in order to appreciate the novel as a whole.  I will attempt to dissect some of the major symbols and give possible explanations as to their importance within the text.  Art itself is a symbol of both freedom

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    Edna’s Struggle and Awakenings      Kate Chopin by the means of creations like The Awakening is trying to make the female in society think about her condition and also push the feminism movement. Her depiction of The Awakening is realistic as she develops Edna Pontellier’s character from a socially and morally respectable individual to an individual that turns her back on everything that was certain in her life to become independent. She struggles between her subconscious

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    Edna tells Robert that she is not a possession show that she is fed up with being treated like a piece of meat. This is the rise of her feminism; she finally started thinking about her feelings. Within The Awakening, Kate Chopin uses the freeness of the scenery to instigate Edna’s awakening. Grand Isle is an island on the gulf coast of Louisiana; it is located a little over two hours south of New Orleans, LA. Surrounding the island is the Gulf of Mexico. Kate Chopin writes, “The voice of the sea

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    After reading “Their Eyes Were Watching God” by Zora Neale Hurston and “The Awakening” by Kate Chopin all I can think about is how both authors emphasize sympathy towards the characters of both their books. Both stories have females as main characters that struggle with finding a reason for existence in life. In The Awakening, Kate Chopin, the author, made it more apparent for the amount of sympathy she has for Edna and In Their Eyes Were Watching God, by Zora Neale Hurston, has a more callous towards

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    Essay on The Awakening

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    In their analytical papers on The Awakening by Kate Chopin, both Elaine Showalter and Elizabeth Le Blanc speak to the importance of homosocial relationship to Edna’s awakenings. They also share the viewpoint that Edna’s return to the sea in the final scene of the book represents Edna being one with her female lover and finding the fulfillment she has been seeking. We see evidence of this idea of the sea as a feminine from Showalter when she tells us that “As the female body is prone to wetness, blood

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    The Awakening Theme: Do not give into the pressures of society and search for your own identity Edna lives in a society that expects women to only take care of children and be an obedient wife. However, Edna feels trapped and does not want to be only limited to being a good wife. One day, she meets a young man named Robert who helps Edna awaken and she gradually begins to want to search for her own identity. Therefore, she has sexual awakenings with Alcee, so she can try to figure out herself

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    The Awakening: Evaluating The Core Values of the Nineteenth Century In Kate Chopin’s novel, The Awakening, the main protagonist Edna Pontellier exists as the embodiment of the feminist ideas that stand as outliers in the midst of the more traditional nineteenth century beliefs. Set in 1899 near the end of this generation, Chopin’s work explores the shared attitudes of most of the novel’s cast as they respond to Edna’s search for independence and freedom, an action that challenges her conservative

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