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Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Blog 5


In The Awakening by Kate Chopin, is focused in the late 1800’s where Kate tells the struggles women had during this time period. They were not only battling themselves, but society as well.

       Edna, being a mother and a wife, has many responsibilities placed upon her by her husband and society in general. There are many stereotypes that society places on women who are mothers in the fact that they are supposed to give everything they have for their kids and put everyone in front of themselves. In The Awakening, Edna is faced with these stereotypes and she doesn’t want to give into them. She does not want to sit at home with the children and be the typical housewife to her husband. She wants to go off and do her own thing and be her own person, without the stereotypes attached. Edna does not want to be with her husband, but living in this time period, there was a social pressure to marry a rich husband and have kids. Edna does a great job of explaining her true feelings by saying, “I am no longer one of Mr. Pontellier’s possessions to dispose of or not. I give myself where I choose.” (Chopin 102) Edna clearly says she doesn’t want to give in to what society wants. She wants to be with who she wants to be with and she doesn’t want to be owned by any man or disposed of by any man.
       I think this is why she killed herself in the end of the novella. She felt like she was faced with no other alternative. At that point in her life, she had nowhere to turn. Robert was gone, she didn’t want to be with Mr. Pontellier, her kids, she felt, were better off with her parents. She moved out and into her own house, but she still felt like she belonged to Mr. Pontellier, and she was being scrutinized by society and her peers for having an affair and not wanting to be a mother. Yes, she was happy for that little bit of time but she realized that her husband would soon return, Robert went back to Mexico and left her behind, and she would soon need to return to motherhood. The pressure of men and the society in which Edna lived in is what I think drove her to suicide. Society and men have a funny way of boxing women in and expecting so much from them. Soon, some women become so constricted within the walls of men and society, they simply stop breathing.

1 comment:

  1. It's interesting to consider why Edna felt that suicide was her only option. I wonder if she was strong enough to live and make a stand for herself.

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