Story Of An Hour Essay

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Silence is a stinging harmony women in the nineteenth-century involuntarily sung. Considering this, Kate Chopin’s 1894 feminist merit “The Story of an Hour” features of a wife who is intolerant to the fact that she was silenced in a marriage; Mrs. Louise Mallard, a short-lived naive “widow” with heart trouble who dissects the news of her husband’s demise, slowly and eagerly registers that her dream of being free, an overwhelming emotion that delivers “monstrous joy,” is thanks to a death that should evoke long-term remorse. The loss of remorse implies Mr. and Mrs. Mallard’s marriage fallout existed because of their individual repressive actions and selfishness, eclipsing each other’s needs, wanting to escape the trap they unconsciously planned, …show more content…

Mallard as a victim of a patriarchal tyranny; therefore, placing Mr. Mallard as a controlling, authoritative husband is appropriate. Given this, it is safe to assume that the role of Mr. Mallard is stereotypical- working class older gentleman, “fixed and gray,” (13) married to a beautiful young and impressionable wife. The “gripsack and umbrella” (21) and the fact that he has been away from home to work implores that he is doing what society expects him to pursue, whatever his career might me. Contrary, his wife fulfills a presumptive role as a housewife, with no descriptive details concluding that she even performs housework. With no domestic chores detailed, it is appropriate to infer that Mrs. Mallard spends her free time, the time period where she is supposed to perform her domesticity, captivated and preoccupied with the idea of being independent, contrasting the reality of the husband’s unintentional impulsion to further deepen his wife’s despair in the …show more content…

Mallard’s fears are camouflaged, when the husband generally returns home from work, with an effective, unplanned agenda. Society disperses and markets the idea that a husband is responsible for his masculine duty- working to maintain his family, and a wife’s expectation is to do the housework, specifically, nurture and care for her baby. There is no mention of a child, or wanting to have a child in the first place with the Mallards. This doesn’t trouble or worry Mrs. Mallard since the fact that she is “young, with a fair calm face” (8), almost unable to ponder the fact she can have a baby due to idea that she is in some way like child based the way she perceives she is being treated in her undemocratic marriage. Moreover, she is ill-equipped to bring one into the world where she feels guilt over the fact that she hates living under society’s feminine standards (4). Carefully adopting this thinking, the reader can assume that her marriage is overbearing, equivalent or less to taking care of a child. The reader can also assume that less intimacy may be a red flag in the Mallard’s crumbling marriage. Although Chopin does not mention the husband’s needs, Mr. Mallard probably feels less masculine not having a child to protect and care for other than his wife who involuntarily may have upset her husband, deepening their relationship into a shallow

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