Essay On Edna Pontellier's Awakening

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In the Awakening by Kate Chopin the main character, Edna Pontellier, represents individual freedom for everyone, especially women, who at the time were expected to do many things that are looked upon as old fashioned and are uncommon today. Edna Pontellier starts out as a trophy wife to an older, wealthy businessman, Léonce Pontellier, who like many husbands of the time tries to control his wife. As the story goes on Edna begins to question the ways of society and her place in the world.
Enda is struggling with who she wants to be, the trophy wife she is expected to be or the independent woman with her own beliefs. The first time we see Edna stand up for herself and do what she want is the night she’s sitting on the porch with her husband. Mr. Pontellier has never had Edna stand up for herself and expects her to do as he says, so he exclaimed “I …show more content…

She has accepted that she does not want to be bound by society. As she is speaking with Mrs. Ratignolle she says that she “would give up the unessential; I would give my money, I would give my life for my children; but I wouldn't give myself.” While it seems that her own life would be an essential she doesn’t view it that way. She believes that her identity is more important and she doesn’t want to conform to the way of society or have her life dictated by those around her, she refuses to give up an essential part of her, her identity.
Once you near the end of the book Edna has come into her own. She moves out of her house on Grand Isle, and into the pigeon house. She was free to do anything she wanted. Why? On account of the fact that she feels as if she has “descended in the social scale, with a corresponding sense of having risen in the spiritual”, allowing for personal freedom without remorse. Edna has decided that she doesn't want to be a trophy wife that has to be worried about getting sunburned, but a woman who is free from social obligations and

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