Kate Chopin The Storm Analysis

946 Words2 Pages

Marie Smith
EN 201
May 5, 2014
Literary Analysis
Kate Chopin, a prolific writer of the late 1800’s, was actually not a native of the culture of which she’s famous for depicting. Born and raised in Missouri, she married a native of Louisiana, Cajun-born Oscar Chopin, who whisked her away to Natchitoches, Louisiana, where she became engrossed in southern life and living. This inspired much of the literature she produced throughout her career, even though she wrote most of it while living is St. Louis, Missouri, following the death of her dear husband in 1882. She began writing as a way to support her family, and was successful in publishing a myriad of literature, including short stories, novels, and magazine scripts (Wyatt).
In “The Storm,” Chopin depicts characters previously introduced to readers in her story, “At the ‘Cadian Ball”, so there is no need for another set up as to who the characters are. She just jumps right in to the situation at hand. Bibi (a child) and Bobinot (his father) are at a hardware store when they encounter a storm blowing in. In the meantime, Calixta (Bobinot’s wife) is at the house, which is about four miles away, as an old lover, Alcee, rides by and seeks shelter from the storm. He attempts to stay outside, but is driven in by the rain and wind. While inside, he and Calixta engage in a sensuous affair while the storm drives on outside. Upon the storms’ leaving, Alcee leaves Calixta in a whirl of joy to go home and write his wife, Clarisse, that it would be fine with him if she decided to stay on in Biloxi for a while longer. Bibi and Bobinot come home to a joyous wife and mother, who greets them with a hug and a kiss, instead of rage as to where they had been this whole time. Bobinot is rather perpl...

... middle of paper ...

...into their personal lives by engaging in an affair. Chopin depicts a traditional Cajun woman in a traditional role, but expresses the importance of the woman in the home by showing the woman as being rather in control of the house, as noted by the husband’s responses and reactions to their women. Chopin pushes the envelope with her explicit story telling and lack of background on these characters is fascinating, inviting the readers to indulge for just a moment in the realistic dangers of such an affair, that it could threaten to break a house apart, yet somehow, at the release of both Alcee’s and Calixta’s personal storms, each family is happier in the end. Chopin leaves the reader wondering if this happiness is fleeting, like the storm of the afternoon, or if the families will all be better off now that Alcee and Calixta have indulged in their sensuous desires.

Open Document