The Role Of Women In 'The Awakening'

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The Awakening written by Kate Chopin in 1899 was a feminist fiction novel ahead of its time. When the book was first published, it was met with condemnation and scorn from the public. They did not approve of the controversial topic of a woman not being dependent or subservient to her husband and family. Ironically, The Awakening became very popular in the 1950s, well after Chopin had died, and was praised for its “[beautiful] writing and its modern sensibility” (“Kate Chopin”). The novel demonstrates that people are pressured to conform to the binary gender roles of society in the 19th century.

The Awakening centers around Edna Pontellier, a married woman in the 1890s in Grand Isle, and later, in New Orleans, Louisiana. The book starts …show more content…

Women were expected to be timid, weak, dependent on the men, prone to hysteria, pure, not sexual, submissive, and passive. Those who did not fit these ideals were shunned and considered deprived of their sexuality. Doctors had believed that women feel very little sexual desire and only the weird ones feel a strong sexual desire (Radek). In The Awakening, Madame Reisz is unpopular with the public and is known to be disagreeable. She is not a timid or submissive woman and speaks her mind (Chopin 99). Women were allowed to have an education and study, but that was only if it did not interfere with their housework. Serious and passionate study is acceptable if it dealt with a social or religious issue. Otherwise, it is considered unfeminine and off-putting in a way that women are trying to “usurp men’s ‘natural’ intellectual superiority.” Physicians believed that if women were too smart then their uteruses would deteriorate and lead to insanity (Hughes). Adele Ratignolle is the embodiment of a motherwoman. She “[idolizes her] children and [worships her husband]” (Chopin 16). Edna Pontellier is fond of her husband and cares for her children, but she is not devoted to them. As she told Madame Ratignolle, she will give up everything for her children except for herself (Chopin …show more content…

It was thought that women were inferior, excluding their morals and innocence, to men in many ways and were the antithesis of men. The roles of men and women were complete opposites of each other; the men were expected to work away from the household, while the women were expected to work at home to take care of the children and household. Women are expected to be chaste and men to be extremely sexual. The Awakening displays good examples of the roles men and women were forced to

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