Psychoanalytic Literary Criticism On Kate Chopin's The Awakening

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A Psychoanalytic Literary Criticism on Kate Chopin's “The Awakening” Did you know that 81% of Americans feel they have a book in them? (Epstein par. 1). That the life they’ve experienced, sprouted, and learned countless lessons from giving them the initiative to write. That is exactly what Kate Chopin had in mind when she wrote the book, “The Awakening.” In, “The Awakening” Chopin writes about the culture she lived in, the situations she went through, and the feelings she felt in the society. “The Awakening” takes place in the setting of Louisiana, or as the book mentions it, Grand Isle, a town in Louisiana, and New Orleans, a city in Louisiana. For Chopin’s life, a source claims, “In 1870 she married Oscar Chopin, a wealthy Creole cotton factor, …show more content…

Pontellier’s and Chopin’s life, a reader can now see the situational connections Chopin included in the book. Since this society wanted women directly controlled by their man, you can see how emotionally unstable Edna and Kate could be if unhappy. A situation we see in both of them is the finding of a new lover, although it is forbidden and shameful. In “The Awakening” Edna, while being neglected emotionally from her husband, grows a great friendship with a man named Robert. The longer they spend time together, the more they fall in love. The movement continues and Mrs. Pontellier ultimately cheats on her husband. “He kissed her with a degree of passion which had not before entered into his caress, and strained her to him. “I love you,” she whispered.” (108). An indirect correlation is in Chopin’s life when a source concludes, “During this time, she had an affair with a married man, Albert Sampite, a hard-living, passionate Louisiana farmer. This experience and others fueled her later writing.” (Brantley, par. 3). This shows both people experiencing the situation of prohibited love and you can only imagine the feelings that came with it. When connecting both the culture they learned and the major situation they both

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