The Role Of Women In The Awakening By Kate Chopin

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In The Awakening by Kate Chopin, we are able to see a different view of society in the 1890’s.The book relates to the romantic era of the time, which in the book is shown through Edna Pontellier. The role of the women is questioned because of the action of Edna Pontellier and her worldview is different than the average women in the 1890’s. Kate Chopin compares to a sense, Edna and her friend Adèle Ratignolle as the ‘average’ women. The main topics of the romantic era, which shape her worldview is shown throughout the book is nature, rebellion and escape as shown in the lecture by Dr. Szabo.
Edna Pontellier tries to fit herself into the norm society that she is in, by being a housewife, watching the children, and taking care of her husband. …show more content…

Dr. Szabo explains the individualism and freedom started to appear in the Romantic Era, which we see with Edna’s actions in the reading. One night her husband found her outside sleeping and demanded her to go inside, but he resisted, “She wondered if her husband had even spoken to her like that before, and if she had submitted to his command” (Chopin 33). She remembered that she had, however this time was different and she told him that if he were to talk to her again like that she would not respond. Her worldview of a woman being dominated by her husband had changed. Before the summer is Grand Isle, she remembers she would never talk to her husband like that and just gotten up and went inside to bed. She knew she changed when she felt at best when alone and not with anyone even her children. On Tuesday’s Edna was to stay home and attend to any callers or carriages that come by the Pontellier home. However, on this Tuesday she went out just because she wanted to and did not leave any excuse, this made her husband mad (Chopin 55). At this point her husband is now starting to see that she has changed a lot since the summer and she was not the women he married seven years ago. She was alienating herself from her reality because she was longing for something more that she could not have because she was a married woman. Edna started to rebel more and more as her emotions started to become …show more content…

She starts to think more and more about Robert and even goes back to Grand Isle with him for a day. This means she escaped back to the simple life and nature, which she experiences during the summer. While her husband is in New York for business, she decides to escape her big, luxurious home and rent a smaller ‘pigeon home’, as she called it (85). Edna is trying to escape herself in a way by trying to leave her old-self in the other house; like starting over with her new found confidence. She even starts to paint art again, escaping from her duties. She spends most of her time with Robert and she was very happy and could not wait for the next day to see him. Robert awoke her emotions and sexuality, which was her escape from her real life as a woman in the 1980s. She was finally able to feel and love someone because she wanted to and now because society told her

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