Awakening One A : The Awakening Speaks To Essay

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¶ … Awakening ONE (a): The Awakening speaks to the fact that women were breaking away from the dependence they had on men (and the power men had over women as a cultural tradition). When Edna learns to swim, for example, she is extremely happy that she has control over something that propels her; Chopin uses Edna's emerging independence (and Edna's repulsion for the "…vague, tangled, chaotic…exceedingly disturbing" truth about her own life) as a metaphor for this breaking away from the role women played (Complete Works, 995). On page 1,000 Edna enters the water with no clothes and feels like a "new-born creature. Chopin's book broke literary tradition and created quite a stir because of the racy life and changes of Edna that led to her rejection of her wifely duties; the literary world, and the world of readers, were shocked because wives traditionally had obligations, and hence Chopin broke the mold. That male's traditional mold had been well established by DH Lawrence, James Joyce, and other novelists, and by portraying Edna as a woman who desires emotional closeness and intimacy -- and leaves the bonds of marriage to find those feminine experiences -- Chopin changed literary conventions.

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Edna's husband can't relate to his wife in any context other than as a possession he has the right to own and control. The cultural norm in the 19th century was for a husband to build his wife a home, to confine one's wife to that home and to expect his wife to always be there. Chopin also is impacted by her association with Adele Ratignolle, who is involved in a traditional marriage with husband and children but Adele listens to Edna and allows Edna to see the life that Edna really wants to pursue. Adele clearly understands Edna and supports Edna's desire to become an artist. Robert enters Edna's life and helps her have the courage to learn to swim (symbolic of her new-found independence). And Edna is very moved by the music that Mlle. Reisz plays; Edna responds to the music and to Robert's supportiveness and learns to swim, with is a huge emotional release for Edna.
THREE (c): Culture and setting play an important part in the success of a novel. For example, Edna dreams of becoming an artist and she is drawn to Mlle. Reisz because…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works Cited

Chopin, Kate. (1969). The Complete Works of Kate Chopin. Ed. Per Seyested. Baton Rouge:

Louisiana State University Press.


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