In “Desiree’s Baby”, Desiree is just the wife and the mother of Armand’s child that he ends up denying. Women did not have a say so at all during this time. Armand is the very strict slave owner, but he is also the “breadwinner”, but he makes Desiree feel complete when he is showing her his soft side. When he starts to disown the baby that’s when Desiree becomes weak because he blames her for him being mixed blood. That is when she tells her mom “My mother, they tell me I am not white. Armand tells me I am not white. For God’s sake tell them it is not true. You must know it is not true. I shall die. I must die. I cannot be so unhappy, and live” (Chopin 5). After Armand tells her to take the baby and leave, Desiree becomes depressed and does not want to live…
Man often pairs logical rationale with the underlying emotional basis for his decisions, but emotion ceases to exist when it no longer parallels the rationale. At the beginning, Monsieur Aubigny’s passion for Désirée awakens with the ferocity of all “that drives headlong over all obstacles.” Chopin compares its tenacity to an avalanche and a prairie fire, giving the impression of strength and omnipotence, and Monsieur Aubigny uses this passion to justify his quick courtship and marriage to Désirée. However, just as the fire and the avalanche, his passion weakens with every obstacle. Upon his realization that Désirée gave birth to an African-American child, his passion immediately freezes. He loses his humanity, indifferent to Désirée’s pleas…
In the era Chopin wrote "Desiree's Baby" sexism was a major point in the lives of women, permitting them from being able to speak for themselves. Chopin later reveals that Armand was the one who truly was of black dissent and he was the one who had passed those genes down to the baby. But Desiree who has all the right in the world to defend herself cannot simply because of her sex. She is accused of the "unconscious injury she had brought upon [Armand's] home and his name"(244). Although Chopin states that Desiree is whiter than Armand and the baby, because of the setting of the story she cannot defend her honor in saying she isn’t black. Peel writes that, "Desiree is immersed in her husband's value system and never stands up to [Armand], not…
In the short story, Kate Chopin portrayed the character Armand to be prideful and have impetuous actions, thus leading to the demolishing of a once joyful family. Chopin shows Armand’s impulsive actions in the beginning when Armand falls in love with Desiree saying, “ The passion awoke in that day, when he saw her at the gate, swept along like an avalanche, or like a prairie fire, or like anything that drives headlong over all obstacles.” (Chopin 1).The way he falls in love with Desiree foreshadows and explain his instant hate for her once he believes that she is the one cursed with the black heritage.When…
As a woman, Desiree’s joy in life lied in her happy family yet she was deserted by her own husband. Armand’s treatment towards Desiree made her became miserable and so when she left with the child, she had nothing to live for. Armand and Desiree were very much in love at the beginning of the story and Desiree could not cope without him. Desiree did not understand what she had done but she felt guilty. Armand thought that she had betrayed him that she was an unfaithful wife. The change in Armand’s attitude towards his wife affected Desiree and due to this she killed herself and her child. On the other hand, our young African-American narrator was a slave. He was and always has been an obedient slave who believed if he worked hard enough the white community would accept him. Thus, through all the abuse and after being treated as an entertainment, he still held on to his speech the one thing he was firmed of. And in the end, though he was very confused if his grandfather’s words were true he had to go continue his academic life first, which left him in a crossroad.…
Race is a major issue in the short story. Armand tried to figure out his past and the person he really was and assumed that Desiree was the actual reason that resulted in the mix racial status of their baby. In addition, Armand felt like his wife’s race, which he always assumed was black, was the main reason for the change in everything; this is because his wife did not live with her biological parents and that she did not even understand her ethnicity “that is, the girl’s obscure origin” (Chopin 1).…
In Kate Chopin’s “Desiree’s Baby,” Desiree is the adopted daughter of Monsieur and Madame Valmonde’, a wealthy Louisiana family. As a baby, she was discovered lying in the shadow of a stone pillar near the Valmonde’ gateway which made it unknown who she was or where she came from. She grows up and marries a wealthy Louisiana plantation owner, Armand who makes it clear that Desiree’s unknown heritage did not matter to him. They eventually have a child, a son, who appears to have traces of African ancestry and because of Desiree’s unknown heritage Armand immediately assumes that she is half black. After being rejected by her husband, Desiree takes the child and walks off into the bayou where she is never seen again. Armand, filled with resentment, proceeds to burn all of Desiree’s belongings. While doing so, he discovers a letter from his mother written to his father which reveals that Armand is the one who has mixed heritage in his background, not Desiree. The irony and racism Chopin uses throughout the story indicates Armand’s unknowingness about his family’s secret background.…
You can feel the tension in the air between Desiree and Armand. They loved each other with pure passion, Desiree and Armand had a beautiful baby together and as well loved her unconditionally. This was until Armand found out about Desiree’s upcoming as a child and heritage. This was in a time where blacks and whites were not considered equal, and blacks were treated unfairly to the rest of society. Armand found out that his beloved wife is black, “ He thought Almighty God had dealt cruelly and unjustly with him; and felt, somehow, that he was paying Him back in kind when he stabbed thus into his wife’s soul. Moreover he no longer loved her, because of the unconscious injury she had brought upon…
Desiree is found in “asleep in the shadow of the big stone pillar.”(199) It is no coincidence that the same place that Desiree is abandoned is the very place Armand falls “in love with her.” (199) The shadow that Desiree sleeps in foreshadows her death; the big stone pillar is the tombstone she never receives since she drowns to death in the bayou. With this large pillar representing her death, the fact that Armand is struck by infatuation while Desiree leans against the pillar also foreshadows the death will be of Armand’s doing. Armand’s harsh treatment and overly prideful sense of self leads to her demise. Another reason Chopin uses this juxtaposition is to highlight Armand using Desiree for her “obscure origin.”(199) The pillar also represents Desiree’s lack of a past; she is supposedly found by Armand where she was lost. “Armand Aubigny riding by and seeing her there, had fallen in love with her. That was the way all the Aubignys fell in love, as if struck by a postil shot.”(199) When Armand realizes he can use her ambiguous ancestry, he seizes the moment instantly and falls…
Symbolism is filled throughout this story, and starts right from the beginning with the defining of a woman’s place in society. Desiree’s adoptive father “had found her lying asleep in the shadow of the big stone pillar” when he first saw her (Chopin 242). The stone pillar is a representation of man and his manhood. In the Victorian era, “[m]en, controlled by their mind or intellectual strength, were allowed to dominate society, to be the governing sex, given that they were viewed as rational, brave, and independent” (Historical Analysis). This rendered no other place for women, who “on the other hand, were dominated by their sexuality, and were expected to fall silently into the social mold crafted by men, since they were regarded as irrational, sensitive, and dutiful” (Historical Analysis). The fact that Desiree is found underneath the shadow of a…
This one small line the whole story is revealed, these slave had gone through so much inbreeding with the white part of society that most of them where whiter than the people that considered themselves white people. Not only is La Blanche’s skin as white as Desiree’, we are also given the idea that these too women resemble each other. They look as if twins and they have this kind of untamable wildness about them; Desiree is a woman found as a child with no past “in need of a future” and La Blanche is a white slave that isn’t supposed to be touched by white genitals set by the rules of society. Chopin also showed how common this happened, in the story it says ONE of La Blanche’s boys, implying that La Blanche has more than one son, resembled…
A culture that enslaves the lesser human with acts unspeakable in nature creates an ideaology that a subculture is less than human, while perpetuating that a higher class is more justified in their actions through racism, slavery, and rape. The culture that perpetuates such hate is one that is superior to all others. In "Desiree's Baby," Kate Chopin scrutinized Southern Racism and the repugnance of miscegenation through the eyes of Desiree. Desiree was a young bride that was adopted with no connection to the past that marries a successful Louisianan plantation owner. Desiree and Armand have a baby, but something isn't quite right with him because at about three months of age the truth comes out, the baby has African origins causing the marriage to dissolve. Armand's accusation leads to heartache and tragedy because he valued his family name more than his family. Having a mulatto in those times was not unheard of, but not in "his" family. The cultural system is flawed because it leads to pride being challenged and personal humiliation of social system based on white supremacy and the oppression of women and people of color.…
“Desiree’s Baby” is a story about race, in Kate Chopin’s story. The reader begins to be aware that there is a mystery about that child’s parentage, when Desiree gives birth to her child. Besides Desiree’s racist husband, he finds out that she was born from black parents. The story of Desiree’s Baby is about race, it is a mystery about the child’s parentage.…
The setting has a major role to the ironic ending because it takes place in antembellum South where blacks are not treated equally to whites. There are several hints at where and when the story takes place. First, Armand’s last name, Aubigny, was “one of the oldest and proudest in Louisiana” (Chopin 89) which tells us it takes place in Louisiana. Also, Chopin says that Armand owns a plantation and many slaves which wouldn’t have been possible after the Civil War times showing that the story takes place during the antebellum period. The name of Armand’s plantation, L’Abri, is also ironic because it means “the shelter” in French which is ironic for Desiree because it is a bad place for her not a good place. Chopin explains how “there was something in the air menacing her peace”. The story wouldn’t take place in any other time period or location because if it did, Desiree wouldn’t be discriminated for being black, therefore wouldn’t of run of…
and their family because in his eyes they have broken his rules. For Armand these rules and social standards keeps his life from falling apart. Without it he is nothing so he must burn everything in order to bring back the old him or so he thought. As well as conserving order he hates Désirée now for the fact that she tainted his family name with her blackness. Yet just as he wanted to destroy his new life with he finds out new information about him that he will never forget. This shows the huge mistake that he has made and claims him responsible for the destruction of his own…