The Hours Essays

  • The Hours Sparknotes

    627 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Hours The Hours is a novel that deals with the various cultural aspects of life. Michael Cunningham's writing reflects the various nuclear families, the different economic conditions, and the social issues involving the three women in the novel. The Hours begins with Virginia Woolf who is married to Leonard. They do not have any children of their own. Woolf lives in London in 1923 battling mental illness and struggling to write a book, Mrs. Dalloway. She struggled and finished the book

  • Skunk Hour

    827 Words  | 2 Pages

    Frustration’s Armored Aroma Skunk Hour by Robert Lowell and The Armadillo by Elizabeth Bishop are two closely related poems. Both share the theme of an animal carrying with it natural defenses, and the image of an isolated spectator. However, there is one important contrast between these poems: The Armadillo portrays a creature who cannot comprehend the events destroying the life about it, whereas the speaker in Skunk Hour understands, possibly too well, the events affecting its life. By using

  • Story Of An Hour

    712 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the Story of An Hour, Mrs. Mallard seemed to me like an old misunderstood woman and as we are told in the very first line, afflicted with a heart trouble. I was surprised later, when it said that she was young. I think that Chopin is showing us a social situation of the times with the woman as a prisoner of her husband. Marriage was not always about mutual love between two people and during that time Chopin was writing, which was during 1804-1904, this was often the case. Marriage was as much

  • Six Hours Of Television

    1722 Words  | 4 Pages

    Six Hours of Television In looking at modern television programming there are hundreds of shows to choose from. Picking six hours of television to analyze from the prospective of an anthropologist is by no means easy. It is easy however, to talk about what our nation looks like to others who have never been here. Everyone is gorgeous, lives happily, and overcomes all problems, but more on that later. Four hours of the programming I chose is perhaps the most popular programming this year, consistently

  • Expectations in the Movie The Hours

    3009 Words  | 7 Pages

    Expectations in the Movie The Hours We expect those endowed with a gift - be it artistic, intellectual or circumstantial - to cultivate that gift and use it as a vehicle for excellence in life. In the movie The Hours Virginia Woolf, the 20th Century British author; Laura Brown, a doted-upon 1951 Los Angeles housewife; and Clarissa Vaughan, a 2001 New York editor; struggle with their gifts and the expectations they, and others, have for themselves. All three women are obsessed with finding the

  • Analysis on the novel "The Hours"

    1197 Words  | 3 Pages

    QUESTIONS ON THE FILM “THE HOURS” 1) “The Hours”, based on the novel written by Michael Cunningham, is more than a biographical movie about Virginia Woolf. How can you discribe the importance and co- relation between the three female main characters: Virginia, Laura Brown and Clarissa Vaughan? The novel is essentially about women. Women from different periods, of different ages, and oddly the same in various aspects. We get to know women that apparently lead perfect lives, considering the external

  • The Story Of An Hour

    512 Words  | 2 Pages

    The aspirations and expectations of freedom can lead to both overwhelming revelations and melancholy destruction. In Kate Chopin’s “ The Story of an Hour” Louise Mallard is stricken with the news of her husband’s “death” and soon lead to new found glory of her freedom and then complete catastrophe in the death of herself. Chopin’s use of irony and the fluctuation in tone present the idea that freedom can be given or taken away without question and can kill without warning. After learning of her husband’s

  • Irony in The Story of an Hour

    521 Words  | 2 Pages

    Why do bad things happen to good people? We have heard this many times with the death of a car crash or another going bankrupt. Everyone has an ironic situation happen to him or her. Alanis Moressette performed a song about irony in the world’s lives. “…It’s like meeting the man of you dreams…then meeting his beautiful wife…” yeah isn’t THAT ironic, that seems to be my best fortune. Irony reveals a different reality than what appears. We see different types of irony in the stories we read, the songs

  • 40 Hour Work Week

    976 Words  | 2 Pages

    to go to a 40 hour work week. The method of attaining the laws goal of a universal 40 hour work week was initial to make a proposal to the American Federation of Labor. The industrial revolution introduced yet new complexities. Sunrise to sunset was too long to expect people to work indoors at tasks that were now totally disconnected from personal survival. Factory workers became unhappy and began to push for shorter hours. First they asked for a limit of 12 hours a day, 6 days a

  • The Hours vs Mrs. Dalloway

    514 Words  | 2 Pages

    While reading Virginia Woolf's classic novel, Mrs. Dalloway, Michael Cunningham was inspired to write his revision The Hours. In The Hours, Michael Cunningham gives his interpretation of the characters in Mrs. Dalloway while giving it a modern twist. Like Virginia Woolf, Michael Cunningham includes many controversial topics like mental illness, and relationships among individuals of the same sex. While Woolf just mentions the idea of being with another woman in her novel, Cunningham takes this and

  • The Story Of An Hour/The Joy That Kills

    904 Words  | 2 Pages

    There are many artistic components in the making of a film. The plot or the story behind the film is one the most important of these components. The makers of The Joy That Kills in making a film version of Kate Chopin's short story The Story of an Hour took artistic license to its limits. The entire story was dismantled and then completely reinvented. Many characters that are barely present or do not even appear in the story emerge to play important roles in the life of this young woman with heart

  • Mrs.Mallards character (The story of an hour)

    2257 Words  | 5 Pages

    Analysis of Hemingway’s Narrative Technique as a Short- Story Writer For many years, the narrative technique of Hemingway has been under debate. Writers before him had already achieved works that bear the characteristics of the modern short story, and many of their works could stand today, with those of Hemingway and of writers like Faulkner, as representative short stories of modern times. What distinguishes Hemingway both from his predecessors and from his contemporaries, however, is the theory

  • Cunningham's The Hours: The Mind of Virginia Wolf

    1950 Words  | 4 Pages

    Cunningham in his loose adaptation of the Mrs. Dalloway story and the historical revisiting of Virginia Woolf in his novel The Hours. The many adaptations that had to occur in order to capture the very substance of Mrs. Dalloway are the subjects of this work; From the actors and directors in the film The Hours to the writings of Cunningham's adaptation of Mrs. Dalloway in The Hours, and finally to the source of it all - the mind of Virginia Woolf. "Many people, including Michael Cunningham, didn't

  • The Story of an Hour

    841 Words  | 2 Pages

    “The Story of an Hour” By Kate Chopin “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin describes the thoughts and feelings that are depicted in a single hour of the life of Louise Mallard after hearing that her husband has been killed in a railroad accident. As the story begins we are told that Mrs. Mallard is afflicted with a heart condition so the news of her husband’s death is broken to her gently by her sister. Mrs. Mallard’s initial reaction, upon hearing of her husband’s death is one

  • An Hour Symbolism

    700 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the short story “The Story of an Hour”, the author successfully accomplishes the perfect fake out. In the short story, the Chopin leads the audience to believe that Mallard’s husband had died in a train accident only to find out the he is, in fact, alive and Mrs. Mallard herself ends up dying in the end. In “The Story of an Hour,” the author, Kate Chopin, makes use of symbolism by speaking of Mrs. Mallard's heart trouble, constantly discussing the fear of death that is hovering over the house

  • Story Of An Hour

    747 Words  | 2 Pages

    “The Story of an Hour”: Women Pursue Freedom and Self within Feminist Perspective “The Story of an Hour” written by Kate Chopin, who is one of the most important women writers as a pioneer of feminist consciousness of American in the 19th century, is about Mrs. Mallard, who gained "precious" freedom when she was told her husband died in a train accident, but disappointed to die when she saw her husband was still alive. The whole story happened within an hour vividly reflected the pursuit of freedom

  • The Story of an Hour

    1877 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Story of an Hour 'The Story of an Hour' is one of Kate Chopin's most famous short stories. There is a great deal of marital instability in the story by Chopin because most of her well-known stories and novels deal with a woman who wishes for freedom or a marriage that is out of balance. In 'The Story of an Hour,' Chopin deals with an ironical twist; it is that the wife in the story, Louise Mallard, does not realize she is displeased with her marriage until she is told that her husband

  • The Story Of The Hour

    1331 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Story Of The Hour, by Kate Chopin, is about woman who struggles with oppression brought on by her husband and her secret desire for freedom. Mrs. Mallard doesn’t know how truly unhappy she is until she is told that he has died in train accident. The story is limited to a third-person point of view, but is not short on drama thanks to the structure and style of Chopin’s writing. Her theme of oppression is reveled by the irony of the story, in which she discovers a sense of freedom quickly after

  • The Woman of an Hour

    720 Words  | 2 Pages

    If any other characters in Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” were to read Mrs. Mallard’s thoughts, they would surely be horrified. What sort of sane, caring woman would feel joy and relief at the death of her husband? She must be a terrible person, despite her reasoning for those feelings. How could Mr. Mallard have chosen such a woman for his bride? She’s a gem, truly; note the sarcasm. Though, one does have to consider what else there is to Mrs. Mallard. She is a human and there is much more

  • Essay Comparing The Awakening and Story of an Hour

    779 Words  | 2 Pages

    Comparing The Awakening and Story of an Hour The heroine, Mrs. P, has some carries some characteristics parallel to Louise Mallard in “Hour.” The women of her time are limited by cultural convention. Yet, Mrs. P, (like Louise) begins to experience a new freedom of imagination, a zest for life , in the immediate absence of her husband. She realizes, through interior monologues, that she has been held back, that her station in life cannot and will not afford her the kind of freedom to explore freely