Love In Kate Chopin's The Awakening

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The Awakening, a novel by Kate Chopin (born Kate O’Flaherty) takes place in Louisiana in the late nineteenth century. At age twenty, Kate O’Flaherty, married Oscar Chopin. He was the son of a wealthy cotton grower in Louisiana. He cherished her tremendously. “By all accounts he adored his wife, admired her independence and intelligence, and "allowed" her unheard of freedom” (Wyatt). Eventually the Chopin family had to move back to Oscar Chopin’s old home in Louisiana from New Orleans. After twelve years of marriage and the birth of six children, Oscar Chopin died of swamp fever in 1982. Three years later her mother died. Kate Chopin was all too aware of tragedy. Her novel, The Awakening, is the story of a New Orleans woman who was infamous in the French Quarter. Thematic elements from her own life appear in the novel: identity, gender roles, love, and the individual …show more content…

For Edna Pontellier, love seems to be an unattainable thing. She and her husband, Léonce Pontellier, had a marriage of convenience. The two show little affection towards each other, Léonce Pontellier provides for his family to make them well off but the two do not have a connection. Edna Pontellier is treated as an object rather than a wife. Additionally, the connection with Edna Pontellier’s lover seems unattainable. When Robert Lebrun entered Pontellier's life, it seemed as if it was a summer fling. By the end of the summer, the two had fallen in love with each other. With all the feelings flooding in, Lebrun leaves to Mexico, leaving Pontellier alone once more. When she next saw him, she was visiting her friend, Mademoiselle Reisz. For the next couple weeks, Lebrun avoids her because of the social barriers between the two. She confronts him with her feelings but later decided against it because of her two young boys. She returned to her home with Lebrun gone without a trace. The loss of the one man she loved pushed Edna Pontellier to commit

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