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    Lit Review

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    Elisabeth Caughel Professor Mills ENC 1102 13 March 2013 Literature Review: Women Revolutionized by Chopin’s ‘Story of an Hour’ Being ahead of her time‚ Kate Chopin’s work focused on female empowerment. It became relevant in her stories of female independence and freedom. In her writing‚ she portrayed women in a way nobody understood or could comprehend. Her stories inspired women to believe in themselves and their freedom to make choices for themselves. In her short

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    Desiree's Baby

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    the sex and color of a person. Kate Chopin exemplifies these roles very accurately within her story‚ Desiree’s Baby. In the short fiction story‚ Desiree’s Baby‚ the author Kate Chopin incorporates many motifs‚ symbols‚ and imagery to describe gender assumptions and racial roles for both men and women in the 1800s by narrating the story of an adopted mother named Desiree‚ with no known lineage‚ and her prideful husband Armand. The most notable literary devices Chopin incorporates to convey her message

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    The ocean is a vast expanse of mostly unexplored space‚ a place with limitless opportunity and mystery. No one knows what they may find in the darkest depths of the ocean. Kate Chopin takes advantage of this unforeseen power in “The Awakening” by associating the ocean with the power to open one’s mind to the freedoms that surround them and the choices they can make. Edna’s initial awakening lead to her become her own person and continuously more independent from Léonce. This change was completely

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    Unbearable Realism: Freedom‚ Ethics and Identity in The Awakening Peter Ramos L ike the last lines of Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper‚” the ending of Kate Chopin’s The Awakening seems always to be read in the context of gender inequality at the turn of the last century. Both texts repeatedly establish the extent to which the patriarchal pressures of that period posed severe obstacles for even the most privileged women. In regard to each text’s ending‚ however‚ the same set

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    The Storm Symbolism

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    Symbolisms in Kate Chopin’s "The Storm" Kate Chopin’s "The Storm" is a short story written in 1898 but was not published until 1969. The story explores an excess of turbulent emotions of the protagonists in the backdrop of unexpected storm. Chopin effectively confronts the brewing conflict of the story by her unflinching depiction of the story through symbolisms. The symbolisms most evident in "The Storm" includes: the storm itself‚ Assumption‚ a small town in which the protagonists first

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    Susan Glaspell) and The Story of an Hour (written by Kate Chopin). I chose to compare The Story of an Hour with Trifles because The Story of an Hour had an interesting twist and I could see that deep‚ intricate thought was put into it. This research paper will examine the similarities and the differences between these two bodies of work. Since both are feminist works of literature‚ spotting similarities

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    The Awakening Essay

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    The Awakening Essay Kate Chopin wrote this book “The Awakening” using a lot of symbolism such as The Sea‚ The Houses‚ and The Birds that she refers to many times in the book‚ to translate the meaning of the book. The meaning of the book is that a women can change from someone very obedient‚ traditional to someone self-realized‚ sexually liberated and independent women. The sea was an excellent representation of the meaning because what the sea meant and the main reason the representation is in

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    Feminism In The Awakening

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    stand up for their rights. Kate Chopin creates Edna Pontellier as selfish mother who abandons her family to follow her frivolous infatuations. Edna leaves her privileged upper middle class lifestyle to drown herself to escape her self inflicted problems. Edna uses her suicide as a quick and lasting escape from a world that she realized she was never truly apart of. The Awakening focuses on the restraining society’s efforts towards women’s’ growth in common gender roles. Chopin portrays Edna as woman

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    Rhetorical Analysis of The Story of an Hour In 1984 Kate Chopin wrote the short story ‘The Story of an Hour’. Chopin‚ born O’Flaherty in 1851‚ is considered one of the most important women in the 19th century American fiction. She is best known for her novel ‘The Awakening’. Her short stories revolve around the way women were treated in this century. The story is about a woman known as Mrs. Mallard and she had problems with her heart. Her husband was involved

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    Kate Chopin’s “The Awakening” examines the implications placed on women for self expression during the 1800’s. Banned for several years by critics after its initial publication in 1899 because of its unsettling content‚ “The Awakening” later became a most cherished account of a woman’s journey towards self-discovery and abandonment of her conventional society. (Kester-Shelton) Within that story is where we meet Robert LeBrun‚ A young‚ flirtatious and confident womanizer with a reputation to match

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