Awakening Self-Discovery Essay

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    about almost have a kinship with themselves bringing out certain personality traits not seen written about women before. From these traits a voice emerges in literature that has been hidden from the public view. This new true voice of female self-discovery finally comes out for the public to see in

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    T he Acts of Peter and the letter to Theodore by Clement of Alexandria, plainly demonstrates an ongoing battle within early Christian development and its teachings. Peter’s focus on the devil’s sexual involvement with humanity and how lust had influenced and damaged people’s sexual awareness from the beginning of time, coincides completely with Jesus’ hostility against Satan. Although, outwardly the church condemned Peter’s teaching of ‘celibacy for everyone;’ nevertheless the sanctified reality

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    Discovery is an intrinsic part of humanity that presents opportunities for an individual’s self-evaluation and renewed perceptions of their surroundings. Specifically, Ernesto Che Guevara's The Motorcycle Diaries (1995) [TMD] recounts the awakening of his political and social conscience (Q) through his examination of the political landscape of Latin America that transforms him into a revolutionary humanitarian. Conversely, Tom Hooper’s Les Miserables (2012) [LM] illustrates an individual's’ inability

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    sex and societal struggles such as in “The Awakening.” “The feminist movement, just beginning to emerge in other parts of America, was almost entirely absent in the conservative state of Louisiana. In fact, under Louisiana law, a woman was still considered the property of her husband. Chopin’s novel was scorned and ostracized for its open discussion of the emotional and sexual needs of women. Surprised and deeply hurt by the negative reaction to The Awakening, Chopin published only three more short

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    Frank Wedekind’s Spring Awakening and Ian McEwan’s Atonement examine the notion that those who abuse power do so for personal gain. Through the use of themes such as: Power in sexuality, including notions of submission and dominance. Coming of age, regarding how children either don’t want to grow up, or contrastingly grow up too quickly. The power dichotomy between parents and children, contrasting children oppressed by their parents to those who act as a parental figure, and the use of guilt to

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    Color In The Awakening

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    In archetypal, moon is associated with female and mother principle. Edna is a married woman and has children. Until her awakening, she gradually departs from her family. RINGS--Edna had given her husband her rings; she "silently reache[s] out to him, and he, understanding, takes the rings from his vest pocket and drop them into her open palm" (524)." But Edna's affection

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    Comparing Awakenings in Chopin's The Storm and The Story of an Hour As a forerunner of the modern feminist movement, Kate Chopin explored bold new characterizations of her female subjects. Chopin is famous for her progressive depiction of the female characters in her stories. Two such stories, 'The Storm' and 'The Story of an Hour,' examine and refute the long held ideal of the subservient wife. 'The Storm,' written in 1898 but not published until later because of its provocative content

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    Edna Pontellier’s Struggle for Freedom in The Awakening by Kate Chopin In Kate Chopin’s novel, The Awakening, the constant boundaries and restrictions placed on Edna Pontellier by society will lead to her struggle for freedom and her ultimate suicide. Her husband Leonce Pontellier, the current women of society, and the Grand Isle make it evident that Edna is trapped in a patriarchal society. Despite these people, Edna has a need to be free and she is able to escape from the society that she

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    Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston was published in 1937 and is based loosely on Hurston’s own experiences, similarly to Chopin’s The Awakening. The story is a told in a circular conversation. It begins with a conversation between an African American woman named Janie Crawford and her friend, Pheoby Watson. Janie tells Pheoby her story, which revolves mainly around three men that Janie has loved and how loving them affected her, both positively and negatively. Through thick southern

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    Edna’s Victorious Suicide In the iconic debated novel “The Awakening”, Kate Chopin’s novel takes place in the Victorian Era, which is in the 19th- century, similarly the novel was published in 1899. Edna is depicted as a woman longing for more, a woman who was looking for more than just a life of complacency and living in the eyes of society. The story uses Edna to exemplify the expectations of women during this era. For example, a woman’s expression of independence was considered immoral. Edna was

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