Theme Of Identity In Kate Chopin's The Awakening

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In The Awakening by Kate Chopin they’re are many themes developed through the novel. There is an existentialist point of view taken on in the novel, through imagery, metaphors, symbols, and literary devices. The views on identity are a reflection on unconsciously held beliefs that Enda has throughout the novel.
One of the first main themes is identity. Throughout Edna’s life she has labels put on for her, she wants to become her own person and discover her identity without society's labels. The book focuses largely on the identity crisis that Edna is having to find herself. We can see that Edna has always been looking for her own identity even if she didn’t realize it, for example, the quote: “Even as a child she had lived her own small life all within herself. At a very early period she had apprehended instinctively the dual life—that outward existence which conforms, the inward …show more content…

At that point in the novel, Edna stopped caring so much as to what other people thought of her, and cared of what she thought of herself more. Edna would rather be hated for who she is then loved for who she is not, but its was hard for her to be herself when people didn't understand who she was trying to be.
Birds are one of the major ways that chopin expresses the themes in the novel. In the novel there is a parrot that is always misunderstood, and unspoken which can represents Edna. The is also a mockingbird who can represents Mademoiselle Reisz, and the odd things she says. We see that the mockingbird is one of the only who understands the parrot and what it says, like how Mademoiselle Reisz is one of the only who understands

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