Personal And Family Conflicts In Kate Chopin's The Story Of An Hour

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Some authors put in words their life experiences that empower them to do their works a mix of emotions capable of touching readers’ hearts, lives, and societies. Kate Chopin’s stories are examples of personal and family situations that affected her drastically, and those hard situations are the inspiration of her works and the reasons of being against chauvinist which marked and distinguished that century. She grew up in a particular family ruled by women in the nineteenth century, and it was the base of her strong feminist thoughts and her disagreement towards societal rules which was illustrated in “The Story of an Hour”
To begging with, Chopin’s father died in a train accident when she was five years old in 1855. In The Story of an Hour, …show more content…

Fortunately, as stated by Neal Wyatt, “By all accounts he adored his wife, admired her independence and intelligence, and "allowed" her unheard of freedom”. Oscar Chopin was a perfect man for Mrs. Chopin, they had a happy marriage, seven children, and an outstanding financial position. But their marriage lasted twelve years because Oscar Chopin died of swamp fever in 1882. Once again Kate Chopin was met with a situation that promoted her independence, and she had to take charge of the family and business. To find a man in the nineteen century that accepted the independent thoughts and liberty of a woman was very rare and hard, so it could be said that Kate Chopin was lucky to find a man that understood her, but it looks like the ones who loved, respected, and accepted her always died. Each loss in Chopin’s life left her with new challenges that in some way oppressed and forced her to live in function of her family. In The Story of an Hour, there is a sentence that shows Chopin’s personality clearly; “There would be no one to live for during those coming years; she would live for herself” (Gardner xx). It reflects what being married meant for her, and used different elements to send her message of liberation and the repression of marriage. Irony is an element that Chopin used constantly in her stories as an example, “When the doctors came they said she had died of heart disease --of the joy that kills” (Gardner xx). She was able to communicate many women voices that felt oppressed and trapped in their marriages and in society. In her real life, Chopin had to run her husband’s cotton store to support her family, and the data found about her does not show her interest about business, but she had no choice. After a year, she sold the company and moved to St. Louis in 1884

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