Kate Chopin's The Awakening

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In Kate Chopin’s The Awakening, Edna Pontellier, the protagonist, struggles to find her identity as a woman in a society that emphasizes very little on a woman’s role. Edna encounters not only her own personal boundaries with her two small sons and finding where her priorities lie concerning them but her society’s ideals of a true Victorian mother and woman and all that role encompasses. Victorian society in New Orleans at the time believed that the role of a woman should be restricted simply to the role of caretaker and entertainer of the higher authority, men. She despises the demeaning barrier between the two genders and as she awakens her inner self, she realizes she is violently independent and an extreme feminist—extreme to the point…show more content…
(Mou) Concerning the beginning of the book Mou states that “…Chopin is distant from her heroine Edna.” Meaning Chopin wants the reader to clearly observe Edna’s estrangement from Leonce. Mou then continues with an elaboration on Chopin’s stylistic technique over the conversations between Edna and her husband, further solidifying the division there. In chapter three of The Awakening, Chopin introduces a scene where Leonce has just arrived home and Edna is already half asleep—completely inattentive to Leonce—who is attempting to make Edna check on their son Raul, as Leonce believes he has a “consuming fever.” Leonce grows rather irritated with his wife determination to not get up and check on their son, perceiving her indifference as irresponsibility towards their children and her role as a mother. Edna eventually gives in to Leonce’s authority granted to him through his role as husband, and goes into the children’s room to check on Raul, setting the stage for a long and unsatisfactory relationship (Chopin…show more content…
Grand Isle is where the unfortunate pair fall in love, free of the burdens of society and familial life. Grand Isle also represents the primary onset of Edna’s great awakening, as it is the geographical beginning point of her tumultuous journey. Maddy George goes on to describe Edna’s direct change due to Grand Isle when she arrives back in New Orleans, saying “… in New Orleans she is able to assert herself and take care of her own needs and priorities. Edna’s attitude as a reluctant wife and mother is shown early on in the novel. She describes Leonce as “monotonous and insistent”, and has to be reminded by Adele Ratignolle of her responsibilities. Although she cares for her children in theory, Edna is not a particularly attentive mother, and it is this quality that sets her aside from other
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