The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin

1055 Words3 Pages

In the history of the world, not every person of either gender or race had the same rights and freedoms. Discrimination has always been present in our history as humans: those who have been discriminated against many times in many different cultures are minority races and women. In the past, it was not much like it is today; in fact for example women didn’t even have half the freedoms they do today. Women got their rights, but not without a lot of effort, those who fought for their rights as women have always been known as feminists who sparked the feminist movement. “Mary Wollstonecraft and Jane Austen are the foremothers of modern women’s movement. All of these people advocated for the dignity, intelligence, and basic human potentials of the female sex. However, it was not until the late 19th century that the efforts for women’s equal rights coalesced into a clearly identifiable and self-conscious movement, or rather a series of movements” (Martha Rampton). Eventually after many years of fighting for their rights, the 19th amendment of 1920 finally granted women their right to vote (History Staff, 19th Amendment). Many writers such as Jane Austen as stated above were part of what sparked a feminist movement and fought for their freedoms through their writings. These writings had hidden messages within them fighting for their own gender. In fact, in Kate Chopin’s story of an hour, there are many feminist messages that occur in this story; the first being independence, oppressiveness in marriage, and supernatural forces could have been at work.
Initially, Chopin could be expressing the death of death in correlation with freedom in life. The woman in the story named Mrs. Mallard doesn’t seem to have many freedoms in her marriage ...

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