Marriage In Kate Chopin's 'The Awakening'

570 Words2 Pages

2008 In Kate Chopin's novel The Awakening, a young mother, Edna Pontellier, breaks from her mundane life of obligations and begins to experience life with a new perspective. In doing this, Edna neglects her family. Adele Ratignolle, a friend of Edna’s, is perfectly content with her married lifestyle, acting as the perfect “Motherwoman”(Chopin 12). By displaying Adele as a foil of Edna, Chopin is able to emphasize the importance of love in a marriage. As the novel begins, Edna Pontellier appears to be content with the monotony of submissive married life. She is married to a man who had been universally described as the “best husband in the world”(11). Mr. Pontellier was the ideal husband on paper; he was wealthy, constantly sent Edna “bonbons”

Open Document