Saturday, October 26, 2019
Kate Chopins novella, The Awakening Essay -- English Literature
Kate Chopin's novella, The Awakening    In Kate Chopin's novella, The Awakening, the reader is introduced into  a society that is strictly male-dominated where women fill in the  stereotypical role of watching the children, cooking, cleaning and  keeping up appearances. Writers often highlight the values of a  certain society by introducing a character who is alienated from their  culture by a trait such as gender, race or creed. In Chopin's  Awakening, the reader meets Edna Pontellier, a married woman who  attempts to overcome her "fate", to avoid the stereotypical role of a  woman in her era, and in doing so she reveals the surrounding  society's assumption and moral values about women of Edna's time.    Edna helps to reveal the assumptions of her society. The people  surrounding her each day, particularly women, assume their roles as  "housewives"; while the men are free to leave the house, go out at  night, gamble, drink and work. Edna surprises her associates when she  takes up painting, which represents a working job and independence for  Edna. Leonce does not appreciate this. The reader sees how he assumes  what she should be doing from this quote on page 57: "Mr.Pontellier  had been a rather courteous husband so long as he met a certain tacit  submissiveness in his wife. But her new and unexpected line of conduct  completely bewildered him. ... Then her absolute disregard for her  duties as a wife angered him." Leonce says himself, "It seems to me  the utmost folly for a woman at the head of a household, and the  mother of children, to spend in an atelier [meaning a studio for  painting] days which would be better employed contriving for the  comfort of her family." This quote is rather symbolic as it uses the  word "emplo...              ...men surrounding her succumb to in life. By  defying these "laws" Edna makes clear the morals that all the other  women value; the satisfaction of their husband, the acceptance of  society, and the conformity to stereotypical roles of a woman.    In The Awakening, Edna is used as a tool to emphasize the surrounding  society's assumptions of a woman and the morals that they value.  Often, a character is set apart from their culture for this sole  purpose, to stress a point the author wants to make. In this case,  Chopin wants to show the reader how male dominated society has been,  how quickly women succumb to their "roles", and how easily people can  be shaped to consider a different and all too meaningless set of  morals. Edna is strategically alienated in the novella so as the  reader can discover society's assumptions and moral values of the era  and up until today.                      
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