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    Clayton Gordon 7th Hour AP Lit In Kate Chopin’s novel The Awakening‚Edna’s suicide was the best thing she could do because it was her escape from reality. When the narrator sounds to start like Edna at the end‚ this allows us to have sympathy and side with Edna in almost all situations. Chopin draws many similarities with Edna but only when Chopin is in her ideal world. We know this because Chopin actually says‚ “Perhaps it is better to wake up after all‚ even to suffer‚ rather than to remain

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    author of The Awakening (Fox‚ 2007‚ p. 27). She described Chopin as‚ "…a woman who took women extremely seriously. She never doubted women ’s ability to be strong. She came from a long line of strong women whom she loved and respected‚" (E. Fox-Genovese‚ personal communication‚ June 23‚ 1999). Although she was influenced by the womanizing author Guy de Maupassant‚ Chopin ’s most recognized novel‚ The Awakening‚ leaks feminism on every page (E. Fox-Genovese). Throughout The Awakening‚ Kate Chopin

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    In the feminist bildungsroman The Awakening (1899)‚ Kate Chopin highlights the internal struggles of a Victorian woman restricted from achieving artistic‚ financial‚ and sexual freedom due to conventional gender roles and expectations imposed upon her by society. The author explores the journey of Edna Pontellier‚ a dissatisfied Protestant wife living in the Creole society of late - nineteenth century New Orleans. The protagonist is on a quest to reclaim independence and unity with herself. Along

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    The Awakening by Kate Chopin exemplifies how characters get caught between colliding cultures that deal with ethnic and institutional issues. The protagonist Edna Pontellier deals with cultural collisions‚ due to their role in the awakening of her desires. This cultural collision happens between the Creole women from New Orleans and Edna’s own accustoms‚ this collision causes Edna to have an epiphany. Edna realizes how different she is from the Creole women and begins to question where she really

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    Symbolism of the Sea In Kate Chopin’s “The Awakening‚” the sea is symbolic throughout the novel‚ mostly symbolizing the rush that it brings Edna. When Edna finally learns how to swim‚ she gets a taste of freedom and the power she has within herself. She recalls‚ "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 far out‚ where

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    An Unorthodox Woman Kate Chopin’s The Awakening is a romance novel lacking a fairytale ending‚ and it is about a woman who wanted more out of life than to be someone’s wife or mother‚ which was a quality unheard of in the 1800s. The story commences at Grand Isle and focuses on Edna Pontellier‚ spouse to Leonce Pontellier and mother to two young boys‚ who was content with her life until one fateful summer where she became familiar with a mister Robert Lebrun‚ a lively entrepreneur known to fancy

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    The Awakening is a novel by Kate Chopin‚ first published in 1899 ‚ set in New Orleans and the Southern Louisiana coast at the end of the nineteenth century. The plot centers on Edna Pontellier and her struggle to reconcile her increasingly unorthodox views on femininity and motherhood with the prevailing social attitudes of the turn-of-the-century South. It is one of the earliest American novels that focuses on women’s issues without condescension. It is also widely seen as a landmark work of early feminism

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    In Kate Chopin’s The Awakening‚ the author tells a story of a woman who attempts to discover who she is as a person. That woman‚ Edna Pontellier‚ conforms outwardly while questioning inwardly. Edna married a husband who she no longer desires to be with and does not want the love he has given her‚ she wanted a new love. Throughout the novel‚ Edna contemplated on who she could be and who she is. In the novel‚ Edna is portrayed as three birds- the caged bird‚ the mockingbird‚ and the bird with

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    Edna The Awakening Essay

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    Tommy Pilarz Period 2 Illuminating Scene in The Awakening Novelist Edith Whorton states that a novelist “must rely on what may be called the illuminating incident to reveal and emphasize the inner meaning” of the book. In the novel The Awakening by Kate Chopin‚ the illuminating episode is when Edna has an epiphany after swimming out into the sea. She comes to the realization that she can speak freely and share her emotions openly as she

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    The Awakening: Public Controversy The Awakening‚ written by Kate Chopin‚ was a book that was truly ahead of its time. The author of the book was truly a genius in her right‚ but yet she was seen as a scoundrel. At the time‚ it was "a world that values only her performance as a mother‚ whose highest expectations for women are self sacrifice and self-effacement." ( ? ) The people of that era were not ready to admit or accept the simple but hidden feelings of intimacy or sexuality and the true nature

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