Chapter I introduces us to Edna (the protagonist) and Leonce Pontellier (her husband), the couple who live on Grand Isle (main setting) and are one of the main focuses of the book, Robert Lebrun (a young Frenchman who is attached to Edna), and some minor characters, like Madame Lebrun (Robert’s mother). Chapter II has Edna and Robert talking and expanding their character while Leonce is away at a hotel. Chapter III has Leonce returning home to Edna, criticizing her for acting unlike a common Creole mother, which leaves her crying on the porch due to feeling “oppressed” by her husband, which shows how she wants to be independent, and Leonce leaves the next day. Chapter IV expands Leonce’s character while also explaining how society thinks of regular…
On the surface Edna seems to have it all, the perfect life as it would be perceived by society. She has two children and a doctor for a husband. However, Edna doesn’t feel as if this completes her; instead, she enters a phase of self-discovery and a sense of finding passion again. Edna is trying to break traditional ties that claim that she should be a good mother-woman. This ultimately leads to her awakening or freedom from the life that she believes restricts her. Edna’s sense of awakening happens in stages with different aspects leading up to the final awakening. Her awakening is a cycle that is completed with many different events synching together to form a better understanding of Edna Pontellier.…
Edna’s first awaking happens in response to her being around people of Cajun descent who openly communicate and touch. While spending time on the beach with a Cajun women Edna is touched, this touch is not in a sexual way, but is outside the norm and starts Edna’s journey towards what she will accept versus what is socially acceptable. Edna says that mother-women “created the embodiment of every womanly grace and charm” {Baym 567). Edna does not consider herself to be a motherly-women. Edna’s second awakening occurs when she pushes the bounds of her immortality by swimming out farther than she thought that she could, but still makes it back to shore. This leads her to try new thing even to the point of speaking back to her husband. To speak…
Edna was not going to sacrifice herself or her happiness anymore for others. Not for her husband, her children, her fellow friends: Madame Lebrun and Madame Ratignolle, or even the love of her life, Robert. She loved herself too much and felt herself too important to stay confined to a role that didn’t fit who she was as a person. Edna came to this realization through a series of different experiences: her relationship with Robert, her friendship with Mademoiselle Reisz, and her developing artistic ability for painting. Edna realized that she couldn’t be herself and be happy, and still “remember the children.” She no longer wanted to be possessed mind, body, and soul. In the end, she would only be sad, alone, frustrated, and unhappy. So she came to the realization that she had to kill herself and accepted that fact.…
Student paper (p. 3): The Awakening is about the story of a young wife who is awakened to her sexual needs that cannot be fulfilled within the confines of her conventional marriage (Clark, 2008). Nevertheless, Edna Pontellier is awakened to a yearning for freedom, a relation to and understanding of herself that she has not been aware of missing in the past. In the text, Edna identifies with the masculine interest of her father who the narrator remarks had managed or coerced his wife into her early grave. However, when Edna is awakened to the hidden potentialities she possesses, it is the yearning for freedom and the desire to overcome the limitations imposed on her from outside that determine her actions.…
In the novel The Awakening, the main protagonist Edna represents the character that undergoes change, and has the awakening as referred to in the title. In the first section of the novel, Edna is unsure of her thoughts and actions regarding marriage, her role in the world, and her life in general. In chapter 6, she has an awakening, shown when the narrator announces, “A certain light was beginning to dawn dimly within her, - the light which, showing the way, forbids it” (17). This quote illustrates a major theme in Edna’s life and in the novel, which is change. After chapter 6, the reader and Edna both realize Edna is dissatisfied with her marriage and the limited, conservative lifestyle it allows. This idea is amplified thoroughly later in…
Edna is realizing her position as a human being and recognizes her relations with others in the world. She is having an individual self-discovery or sexual desire and her intellectual pursuits.…
Characters: Edna Pontellier is a twenty eight year old wife of Léonce Pontellier, a businessman from New Orleans, In the middle of the book Edna finds herself dissatisfied with her marriage and her limited lifestyle, she soon falls in love with her husbands best friend Robert Lebrun which starts trouble with her relationship with her husband and her husband's relationship with Robert. I chose dissatisfied as an adjective to describe Edna because she is not that happy with her wife role and feels disappointed with herself about falling in love with Robert.…
The awakening follows Edna Pontellier, a housewife unhappy with her position in society. Due to these unfair expectations of a woman, she sacrifices her chances for a career in the arts. Edna is a gifted artist but her position as a female limits her from pursuing the things she enjoys most. However, she is never shown to be happy about this – in fact, we often witness Ednas disatification. This is only one example where her choice to sacrifice the things she loves for her status of a woman impacts her dramatically. Being a housewife is…
The expectations of tradition coupled with the limitations of law gave women of the late 1800s very few opportunities for individual expression, not to mention independence. Expected to perform their domestic duties and care for the health and happiness of their families, Victorian women were prevented from seeking the satisfaction of their own wants and needs (SparkNotes Editors). This book is started as Edna, her husband, and their two small boys been in a vacation on Grand Isle, in a resort that was managed by Madame Lebrun, and her sons Robert and Victor. But basically it’s really only Edna and her two sons since her husband Leonce, which is a very successful businessman, works in the city during the week and joins them only on weekends. So Edna mostly spends much of her time with her friend, Adele, but eventually begins seeing Robert Lebrun more and more frequently. But later she founds out that his leaving for mexico the next day and he has yet not told her and she got devastated after finding out this news by herself . When Edna and her family returns to New Orleans after the summer , she begins moving more and more away from her traditional role, as she attempts to live life on her own terms.…
The first man that Edna comes in contact with in the novel is her Husband, Mr. Pontellier. The author uses this father and husband figure to create the sense of commitment that comes from love, but nothing else, revealing to Edna the need for more than just commitment. The author creates this sense of commitment on page 7 of “The Awakening” by having Edna be called the “sole object of his existence.”…
However, Chopin also contrasts this light with “shadowy anguish” giving the idea that although Edna seems to have ‘awoken’ from her stupor she is still clouded in many aspects of what she feels. Continuing throughout the book, Edna remains in a deep thought, which also suggests that she has not fully emerged and still continues to be slightly outside of what is real. In the short length of chapter six Chopin abridges Edna’s most significant spiritual awakening throughout the book; capturing the wisdom that is slowly descending upon Edna. After chapter six there seems to be a change and over the course of her time in Grand Isle her reticent character seems to erode. She exposes a stronger sense of herself through her relationship with Robert; his insouciant flirting seems to inspire Edna to reveal herself more to others. Despite this, she still seems to be living a “dual life-the outward existence which she conforms, the inward life which she questions” which could refer back to her mechanized way of life. It becomes evident that as Edna experiences her awakening she begins to blur the lines of these dual lives. This interlacing is shown, most clearly, through her attitude towards her husband and friends and the way in which her social interactions begins to…
All in all, throughout “The Awakening,” Edna learns who she is as a person. By becoming an independent woman who takes risk, she learns she doesn’t need a husband to function throughout society, especially Creole society. From getting into Creole lifestyle, the affairs, and her suicide, I believe Edna was her own biggest influence throughout “The Awakening”. Although, I do believe she learned the repercussion of making risky…
Edna faces this struggle with her husband, Mr. Pontellier because she feels like he controls her. After her first awakening experience, Edna’s husband demands that she come inside and go to bed and it is noted that, “She wondered if her husband had ever spoken to her like that before, and if she had submitted to his command. Of course she had; she remembered that she had. But she could not realize why or how she should have yielded, feeling as she then did.” This realization that her husband used to control her and Edna’s refusal to continue obeying him demarks the first steps she takes toward taking control of her own life. The second prominent example of blatant disregard for her husband’s wishes is when Edna moves into her own house. No longer wishing to live in her husband’s house, she moves to her own as the narrator points out, “The pigeon-house pleased her. It at once assumed the intimate character of a home, while she herself invested it with a charm… Every step which she took toward relieving herself from obligations added to her strength and expansion as an individual.” This validates Edna’s desire to be free from her former life and highlights the fact that she is only able to truly flourish when she is on her own. Sadly, one must be willing to give up relationships in order to fully achieve this sense of…
Edna is a married woman vacationing at her summer home with her family. Edna’s husband conforms to gender stereotypes of this time and is devoted more to his work than to his family, and believes he holds dominance over his wife solely because he is male. In the first chapter of the novel Mr. Pontellier leaves Edna for Klein’s Hotel and doesn’t return for hours. This is the first of many instanced when Edna is isolated from her husband for long periods of time. Edna quickly becomes rebellious toward her husband. In her time alone she realizes that she doesn’t need him and can be perfectly happy on her own. Edna relishes in her first experience of talking back to her husband enjoying the power she suddenly feels over…