The Importance Of Suicide In The Awakening By Kate Chopin

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Suicide has been defined as "the act of self-destruction by a person sound in mind and capable of measuring his (or her) moral responsibility" . Determining one's moral responsibility is what all of humanity struggles with and strives to achieve. Many forces act toward the suppression of this self-discovery, causing a breakdown and ultimately complete collapse of conventional conceptions of the self. In “The Awakening” by Kate Chopin, Edna is a character who ends up committing suicide. So then the question that is being asked is whether or not Edna's suicide is an act of tragic affirmation or pathetic defeat. Kate Chopin chooses to have Edna take a "final swim" as evidence of her absolute defeat as an insightful study of the limitations …show more content…

This release of connections gives way to Edna's subsequent "experimentation" with other members of the opposite sex. Her newly awakened passionate and ruthless self believes that it can be fulfilled with the pursuit of alternate relationships. However, after a while, Edna recognizes that these new relationships mean nothing, and are completely unfulfilling. She realizes that "‘Today it is Arobin; tomorrow it will be someone else. It makes no difference to me, it doesn't matter about Leonce …show more content…

Edna's venture out into the sea on the night Mademoiselle Reisz plays the piano makes Edna's first encounter with the intoxicating allure of being alone. Edna at last surrenders to the sea out of disappointment and pathetic discontent with the state of her being. Faced with a choice which has no acceptable alternatives, Edna admits defeat. Her suicide is the consequence of her inability, or refusal, to assimilate either of her two selves. She chooses death as an escape from domestic submission and also solitary independence. But because she refuses to forfeit neither her independence nor her family, she ultimately refuses to make a decision. This non-decision drives Edna to committing suicide.The ending of Kate Chopin's The Awakening can be open to many interpretations. Edna's suicide can be viewed as an awakening or a failure. " Her suicide gives her the power, the dignity, the self-possession of a tragic heroine. Her suicide is the crowning glory of her development from the bewilderment which accompanied her early emancipation to the clarity with which she understands her own nature and the possibilities of her life as she decides to end it." In Edna's view, she commits suicide because she feels like a possession of her husband, of her children, and of her society. Although suicide is usually seen as a form of defeat, sees her case as a dignified act. Edna chooses her suicide as a way to escape to a better

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