Awakening Women Essay

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    Analyzing Chopin’s use of symbolism in “The Awakening” What would one expect to be the personality of a woman, who was raised in a family of no man dominance in the year of 1800? Kate Chopin was born in Missouri, in 1850 and was one of the five children. At very young age, Kate lost her both sisters and her brother. At age of five, Kate was sent to a Catholic school. Not long after leaving her home, Chopin loses her father. Kate is being sent home from school to live with her mother, grandmother

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    The Awakening 1988 Prompt There are many literary works that have mental or psychological events. This revelation or discovery almost always plays as the climactic peak in each piece of literature. Author’s create such climaxes through foreshadowing, suspense and progressive building up to the point of intellectual or emotional discovery. In Chopin’s The Awakening Edna Pontellier, the main protagonist, experiences an awakening that is extremely climactic for the reader’s. Edna’s awakening is emotional

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    In the novel, The Awakening, the author, Kate Chopin challenges the conventional values of women in society through her characterization of Edna in reference to the motif of the sea, and metaphor of the birds. At the Grande Isle, Edna swims out into the sea for the first time, “A feeling of exultation overtook her as if some power of significant import had been given her to control the working of her body and her soul. She grew daring and reckless, overestimating her strength. She wanted to swim

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    Commonly explored throughout her works, the idea of marriage inhibiting a woman’s freedom is the driving force behind Kate Chopin’s contextual objections to propriety. In particular, The Awakening and “The Story of an Hour” explore the lives of women seeking marital liberation and individuality. Mrs. Chopin, who was raised in a matriarchal household, expresses her opposition to the nineteenth century patriarchal society while using her personal experiences to exemplify her feminist views.

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    influenced everything that was created in a poem. “Sweat” written by Zora Neale Hurston was written during a time period women didn’t have an opinion and it was frowned upon to disagree or go against your husband. This woman in the story over comes the current times cultural norms. The “Awakening” written by Kate Chopin, speaks out against societies gender roles and says women are evolving to hold more than the titles “mother” and “housewife.” It was the time of shifting order and woman gaining more

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    Feminism In The Awakening

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    Feminist Critique of The Awakening ““How many years have I slept?” she inquired. “The whole island seems changed. A new race of beings must have sprung up, leaving only you and me as past relics.””(Chopin 67). The turn of the century was on the horizon, coinciding with those who seek change, rising with the dawn of the new era. One movement to emerge was that of feminism; the challenging of equity and social expectations for women. Kate Chopin’s revolutionary novel The Awakening serves as a catalyst

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    Sneha Basu AP Literature and Composition - A1 Sacrifices in The Awakening Kate Chopin’s book The Awakening published in 1899, provides a snapshot of Creole society through a neutral point of view. The male dominated French-Louisiana society provides a challenge for the main character, Edna Pontellier to adapt to. Through the character of Edna Pontellier, we the audience, see both an emotional and physical awakening. After awakening, Edna tries to combat the societal structures of motherhood which

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    The Awakening Essay

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    The Relationship of The Awakening and Creole Society 	In The Awakening, Kate Chopin brings out the essence of through the characters of her novel. In this novel Edna Pontellier faces many problems because she is an outcast from society. As a result of her isolation from society she has to learn to fit in and deal with her problems. This situation causes her to go through a series of awakenings that help her find herself, but this also causes problems with her husband because she loses respect

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    The Awakening: In what ways is Edna Pontellier a modern woman? If Edna Pontellier had been a woman in today’s society, she would have been considered a rebel. However, she was not fortunate enough to have lived in the 21st century. Instead, she was expected to conform to the expectations of Victorian life. Her husband and friends wanted her to behave as a conservative “mother-woman”, but she had other intentions. Throughout her summer on Grand Isle, Edna experienced a new sort of freedom.

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    The Awakening and Americanism What it means to be an american is ever changing set of standards based on time, traditions, and geographical regions. The Awakening reflects americanism during the Victorian Age: also know as the Gilded Age due to its appearance of affluence which served to mask the many social injustices and high crime rates. Kate Chopin uses The Awakening to illustrate social injustices; such as, the oppression of women, withholding of freedoms from those seen as insubordinate, and

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