"Awakenings" Essays and Research Papers

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    That’s good. Wilson’ll have a little business at last” (Fitzgerald 137). Even in jest this reaction not an appropriate response. A death being referred to as a favorable event can never be ethically uttered. Furthermore in The Awakening‚ Edna has undergone her sexual awakening. She appears

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    The Second Great Awakening can be credited with the creation of many social reforms. The Temperance Movement‚ the abolition of slavery‚ mental health‚ and a better society for the disabled were all reforms during the Antebellum period. The reforms attempted to enhance American society and make it equal and fair to all. One of the very first ideals that America tried to reform was it’s citizen’s alcohol use. Many large cities lacked clean water and milk‚ so they resorted to drinking alcohol to quench

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    narratology was the interpretation of classical narratology in the point of view of one gender. It is hard to imagine a literary text that has affected the study of nineteenth and twentieth-century American culture more profoundly than Kate Chopin’s The Awakening which was published as long ago as 1899. Those who have studied it know that however the novel is framed--as local color‚ as women’s writing--the question that still engages most readers is at the same time very naive and very sophisticated. Among

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    Documented Argument of the Awakening Kate Chopin’s depiction of "The Awakening" is realistic as she develops Edna Pontellier’s character from a socially and morally respectable individual to an individual that turns her back on everything closest to her as she births her new self-being. Edna Pontellier struggles between her subconscious and conscious thoughts as unusual feelings stir unfounded emotions and senses. Some of Chopin’s characters lend themselves in Edna’s "awakening". Through examination

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    The Second Great Awakening was an enormous religious revival that swept the  American nation in the beginning of the 19th century. A revival is defined by Webster’s  Dictionary as “the growth of something or an increase in the activity of something after a long  period of no growth or activity.” This revival caused an unfathomable amount of permanent  change to the United States. The Second Great Awakening converted millions of Americans‚  resulted in several new denominations of faith‚ changed the the way the American people 

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    be elected to join. Inducting literature into an official canon uses a similar process. Through identifying the similarities between the classic canonical novel Tender Is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald and naturalist Kate Chopin’s novella The Awakening‚ one confidently deems the latter author and her work worthy of canonical recognition. Conflicts begin to develop from‚ and

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    regardless of others. In the novel The Awakening by Kate Chopin‚ the main character‚ Edna‚ experiences a realization of the unsatisfactory life she has been living. This awakening leads Edna to reject her marriage‚ family‚ and other relationships she has acquired. Some people believe Edna’s selfish actions should be excused because of the Creole society expectations she is presumed to meet. However‚ the role of selfishness plays a large part in The Awakening through Edna’s personal choices regarding

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    In Kate Chopin’s novel “The Awakening” it focuses on the perspective of a rebellious Edna seeking for self-understanding and love. According to Chopin‚ “ How strange and awful it seemed to stand naked under the sky! How delicious! She felt like some new-born creature‚ opening its eyes

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    In Antebellum America‚ a Second Great Awakening swept the nation through fervorous Protestant religious revivals. As a matter of fact‚ 75% of Americans attended church regularly during this time. The Second Great Awakening was an important period in history because many religions‚ denominations‚ and utopian societies were founded‚ it shaped the way churches are now‚ and it influenced many more important movements in American history. The Second Great Awakening was a time in which Protestant revivals

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    followed the implied rules of fidelity‚ but when these rules were broken‚ there were deadly consequences. In The Awakening by Kate Chopin‚ Edna’s freedom of flirtation drags her down as she fights for independence from the possession-driven‚ man-powered‚ 19th Century world that eventually spirals into her death. Edna‚ who is an innocent‚ rule-abiding woman in the beginning of The Awakening is completely unaware that Robert‚ upon meeting her‚ is being a flirt. Whenever he comes to her cottage with her

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