The Escape of a Modern Housewife in Kate Chopin's The Awakening

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The Escape of a Modern Housewife

“She could only realize that she herself – her present self – was in some way different from the other self” (Chopin 67). The Awakening by Kate Chopin is a compelling story of a woman who is awakened from the miserable duties of a housewife and mother to a woman who falls in love and finds herself. This story is not to judge a woman for having an affair with her husband, but it is to make the reader fall in love with this woman named Edna and go with her on her journey of finding herself. Edna is an extraordinary character in The Awakening, and it makes the reader see the basis of independence, and also giving the reader his or her own journey and reflection of their own life throughout the novel. The reader becomes more independent and more eager to say what he or she wants in his or her own life by reading this. Edna’s actions make the reader question their own life and if they truly admire it. “She leaned over and kissed him – a soft, cool, delicate kiss, whose voluptuous sting penetrated his whole being – then she moved away from him” (Chopin 177). Edna didn’t have to kiss Robert, but she wanted to. The Awakening defines the word “want” verses having to be made to.

“A writer of considerable sensibility and talent” said David Malcolm in The Times Literary Supplement (Malcolm). Kate Chopin was born in 1880 in St. Louis, Missouri. What caused her to begin to write was the death of her husband. She has written At Fault, Bayou Folk, and A Night at Acadie. These stories have appeared in Vogue, Youth’s Companion, Atlantic Monthly, Century, Saturday Evening Post, and other various publications. The publication of The Awakening was in 1899. The result of this novel made people very angry, and it wa...

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...ourney. She meets a lot of people while at Grand Isle and falls in love with Robert. He awakens her, and makes her see who she really is, and after she finds herself, she is satisfied. Earlier in the novel, Edna has a fear of drowning, just like she had a fear of being independent and different than other, but she overcame her fears. There are many morals in The Awakening, such as “Don’t fear and excel as much as you can.” Edna was a courageous woman, and the only courageous woman, to make a difference in the sexes of the late 1980’s. She showed woman how to become free, no matter how hard it is.

Work Cited

Chopin, Kate. The Awakening. New York: Harper Collins, 1972. Print.

Malcolm, David. “Literary Criticism.” The Times Literary Supplement.com. 2011. Web. 18 Oct. 2011.

SparkNotes Editors. “SparkNote on The Awakening.” SparkNotes.com. SparkNotes LLC. 2002.

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