The Awakening Essay

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    The Awakening, by Kate Chopin, is full of symbolism and metaphors. Most of the metaphors in The Awakening are about the change in Edna Pontellier and about the way she feels in society. In The Awakening, symbolism is often used to describe the current state of mind of Edna, some of these symbols include art, houses, music, the sea, and birds. Throughout the story, the way Edna feels in society is often shown in the form of a bird. At the beginning of the story she is like a bird in a cage, but at

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    Feminism In The Awakening

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    privileges as each other. Basic human rights would give others the notion that this is how all humans should have been treated from the beginning. However, this is far from the truth. Books like The Awakening, give us an inside look at how women were treated around 100 years ago. When Kate Chopin wrote The Awakening, she created a blueprint for how we see modern feminism. Without being obvious, Chopin showed how one woman started to liberate herself from an oppressive society. During the 1800s when the book

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    Symbolism in both narrations helped the reader along the story as well. They were used to describe the characters feelings and/or were used to represent the characters themselves. In The Awakening, birds were described several times throughout the story. These birds were used to represent Enda’s state of mind or what may happen to her next in the story. For example, the parrot was used to symbolize Enda’s feeling that she is misunderstood. She feels as though no one can understand what she is going

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    In the novel, The Awakening by Kate Chopin portrays an image where someone shifts from one phase to another one. We find the protagonist go through a shift from patriarchy to feminist resistance. As this story continues to unfold, Edna goes through feminist resistance where she doesn’t want to still rely on her husband anymore and want to live by her own rules. Edna Pontellier’s “awakening” takes place in Grand Isle and New Orleans during the late 1800s. It is an important factor of the book because

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    Birds In The Awakening

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    The Awakening explores the emotional and personal awakening of women in her in her late life. Kate Chopin uses symbols to compare Edna’s world and life to the natural world around her. Symbols such as birds, the sea and sleeping have deeper meanings that resonate with hidden motifs. Chopin’s use of birds throughout the novel, help build setting and develop a deeper meaning to Enda, the main character. Walt Whitman uses nature and animals in nature to develop feelings throughout his poem. Whitman

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    Essay The Awakening

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    The Awakening, by Kate Chopin, tells one woman’s story of her attempt to awaken to her true wants and desires for her life. When Edna Pontellier spends the summer on Grand Isle, she begins to think beyond the role of wife and mother that she has played so far. She begins to think of herself as a separate person with independent thoughts and feelings. Her transformation is difficult and she has great trouble deciding what she really wants in life. Edna attempts to discard all of the traditional values

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    Sacrifice illuminates true internal values, in that it represents a ready willingness to abandon something of great importance. In Kate Chopin’s “The Awakening”, the author utilises the monotonous uniformity of Edna Pontellier’s society, and the unspoken pressures to conform, in order to illustrate Edna’s internal conflict. Chopin’s portrayal of Edna’s sacrifice, conveys that those who value personal freedom will strive to defy societal conventions to temporarily fulfill autonomous desires, but in

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    One particularly striking allegory within The Awakening, written by author Kate Chopin, is the Edna Pontellier’s supposed enjoyment of sketching and drawling as a representation of her role as a mother. Her experiences with her art foreshadow both her failing marriage and her death. She is unable to fully commit herself to her art just as she is unable to commit herself to her husband, children, and her life. Edna saw two contrasting sides of artists in Madame Ratignolle and Mademoiselle Reisz

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    Feminism In The Awakening

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    The Awakening LAP Topic 1 By: Lourdes Rivera AP Literature Mr. Amoroso Rivera 1 Courageous, brave, and valiant are all characteristics that are necessary for one to possess in order to be heroic. The actions an individual takes dictates the kind of person they are and the actions of a hero reflect these characteristics. If the world is against a group of people, it takes a heroic person to break away from the oppression set to hold them down. Women have faced tremendous oppression from the ideology

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    Women In The Awakening

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    Title G.D Anderson, an author, says “Feminism isn’t about making women stronger. Women are already strong. It’s about changing the way the world perceives them.” Edna Pontellier, protagonist of Kate Chopin’s novel The Awakening, discovers her own strength gradually and experiences many obstacles along the way. One of the main obstacles she faces is the conditioned notion that women are inferior to men. While the men are not openly chauvinistic towards women, a deep rooted superior mentality exists

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