Emotions In Kate Chopin's The Story Of An Hour

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The short story “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin is a story about a widowed woman. Through the story, Chopin explains what emotions and what Mrs. Mallard is going through. Mrs. Mallard is told that her husband was killed in a wreck. She was overwhelmed with emotion and had to rush to her room to be by herself, the readers see a different side of Mrs. Mallard that no one knew she had. What her true emotions are is not what the readers are made to believe at the beginning. She is distraught by her husband’s death, but as she begins to think, she realizes she has something to be happy about too, but why is she happy? Now that her husband is gone, she seems free.
This short story was written in 1894, in these times women did not have many …show more content…

There are many stories about these situations, many of them written by Chopin herself. Dimock explains that “For Chopin, one of the practical consequences of this impressionist aesthetics is the trope of surprise that concludes so many of her stories. Since things are transitory in her writings—nothing is fixed, irrevocable, or predetermined—the endings, too, come with a certain freedom” (Dimock). She was known for writing stories that revolved around a woman’s everyday life that struggled with these type of issues. In most of her stories, the women went the opposite of what was expected in this time period and by the reader. They chose the path that they thought was the right one and did not let anyone stop them from trying to be who they truly were. At the end of the story the women usually get what they want out of their …show more content…

At the beginning of this story, Mrs. Mallard is told that her husband is dead, she reacts like a wife would. She starts to cry and leaves to go be by herself in her bedroom, away from anyone that was downstairs. When she is in her room, the readers see a completely different side of Mrs. Mallard, she is happy. Chopin makes the readers aware of the way Louise sunk in her chair, how she felt like something other than herself was pressing her into the chair. In this paragraph, Chopin uses the chair to represent the death of the husband, and how comfortable she felt being embraced by it. She is still upset that her husband has died, but she feels free. She feels as if the freedom will never end. She kept whispering “free, free, free” to herself under her breath (Chopin). The stare and the horrible look had

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