Repression In Kate Chopin's A Story Of An Hour

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Kate Chopin’s “A Story of an Hour” is a great example of how difficult life is for women in the late nineteenth century. When the story was written, women faced limitations in society because they were suppose to follow their husband’s word. Traditionally, the women of the house would be the housekeeper and raise the children, and they did not have the opportunity to make their life have purpose other than that. Kate Chopin does an excellent job displaying how women were repressed by their marriages in that time. The theme of repression is seen through the her lack of freedom, the setting, and irony.
Catherine (Kate) O’Flaherty was born in St. Louis, Missouri, USA, on February 8, 1850 (Clark). She was raised by her mother, grandmother, and great grandmother because her father passed away when she was four. She went to St. Louis Academy of the Sacred Heart to receive her education. In 1870, she married Oscar Chopin, and lived in Louisiana with him. While there she observed the Cajun life. Her husband passed in 1884, leaving her to move back to St. Louis to raise six kids and begin writing. “As a writer, Kate Chopin wrote very …show more content…

Louise Mallard longs to get away from her marriage because she feels repressed. “Kate Chopin focuses on a late nineteenth century American woman’s dramatic hour of awakening into selfhood, which enables her to live the last moments of her life with an acute consciousness of life’s immeasurable beauty” (Jamil 215). Mrs. Louise Mallard’s relationship with her husband is so tyrannical and limiting that even death is considered a reasonable means of escape. The condition of life for Mrs. Mallard is terrible, yet for some reason she doesn't seem to come to full realization until her husband's death. This represents repression of women in that time

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