Women's Role In The Awakening

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For quite a long time, women have been oppressed and not given fair roles in society. Women, similar to African Americans, used to be thought of as the property of men, such as their fathers and husbands. Women's role in society has only recently been upgraded to a working, intelligent, and respected level with equal rights to men. Even now, in the twentieth century, women battle stereotypes of inferiority to men. The effects of this role women are expected to play were often unseen and brushed over, but occasionally tragically devastating. Within the novel of The Awakening, the audience is let in on the personal life of a woman living in the 1800-1900s, Edna Pontellier, as she makes discoveries about herself and the world as a whole through …show more content…

Chopin uses her character and life choices to act as a foil to Edna and her marriage. Madame Ratignolle's marriage is described as, "if ever the fusion of two human beings into one has been accomplished on this sphere it was surely their union," clearly contrasting Edna's own disturbed and distant marriage (Chopin 75). Despite their opposites, as Edna spends more time with Madame Ratignolle, she begins to open up to her like she has never done before. She tells her of how her mother died when she was a small child, her childhood crushes who all seemed to disappoint her, her "purely accidental" marriage to Leonce, and all her her confusing and unconventional feelings she had bottled up inside of her (Chopin 24-25). She is essenttially pouring out all of her her life story along with every emotion she had pent up in her for years on end. This is the beginning of Edna's "awakening" as she experiences the "unaccustomed taste of candor" and says it feels like "a first breath of freedom" (Chopin 25). Her second "breath of freedom" is seen when she is overcome by music and the arts and impulsively decides to plunge herself into the sea, despite her inability to swim, just to feel a bit of freedom and excitement. Once she gets a taste, it is as if she is a child tasting candy for the first time and cannot get enough. The audience sees her beginning to practice her newfound independence as she denies her husband the pleasure of her submittance when he asks her to go inside after the eventful swim. The narrator calls attention to it describing that, "Edna began to feel like one who awakens gradually out of a dream, a delicious, grotesque, impossible dream, to feel again the realities pressing into her soul" (Chopin

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