What Are The Stereotypes Of Women In The Awakening By Kate Chopin

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Under the pressure of the unequally, the stereotype that woman is always the supporters rather than the main finance of the family. Through the feminist lense, Chopin creates the female character who is powerless oppressed by her husband individually, but the woman 's expectation and the society generally. By contrasting Edna thought with each different characters, Chopin portrays Edna transformation through the adversity around her and how it affect her mind of state in which implying society has the effect to how people behave, acts and thinks.

Back in that time, society forms woman to be the mother stereotype which mean dependent and worship their husband, and that whoever intent to break this old morality will be condemned. This theorem, …show more content…

The society condemned Chopin as terrible, crazy, insane, instead of accepted the idea of equality, right of a woman when the awakening first published. Through 50 years of revolution and history events, woman finally has the right to vote, right to work and purchase happiness, and that when the book republished, it becomes the best book as a classic American fiction. In the awakening, Chopin contrasts the image between Adele, the mother woman and Reisz, the independent artist, and that Chopin portrays the society approve toward their behave. Known as one of "the mother women at Grand Isle", Adele puts her family as the first priority like always, and that she is totally "idolized her children, worshiped her husband". By completely "efface" herself to dominate the society lifestyle, Adele 's image is saw as a dream lady, charming and beautiful which her husband would be "brute" and "[deserve] his death by not adoring her. Differ from Adele, …show more content…

Chopin opens with the allusion of the bird, an object to entertainment and a property trapped in a cage implying to Edna position in the dead marriage with Leo, which "she was mistaken". Describing in details that Leo is over excited in "high spirit" after his long day from work, Chopin portrays his unthoughtful rude action of sharing news with his wife. She reveals his observation toward her as his property, and "the sole object of his existence" which cause Edna feels desperate, questions herself "why she was crying" by being like all the other women in the society just to obey her husband command. Chopin, further on, denounces Leo as the heartless husband who treats his wife as an object to satisfy his needs by satire the conversation of Leo and Doctor Mandelet. Leo questions of Edna’s transformation as something wrong, but instead of, trying to communicate to Edna and figure out the problem. He complains how she behave make he feels “uncomfortable”, and that he can’t make Edna obey him like every other women always do to their husband. This thought has spreaded to any man in the society that even Edna’s dad see his daughter no longer a person, but Leo’s assets individually, and an object like every other women generally, and that men are the only one who can “put [their] foot down good and

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