Edna did not fail‚ nor did she blossom into some strong symbol of female independence and grace. Neither argument seem true to The Awakening. In it‚ Edna embarked on a journey that would ultimately transform her entire identity and her satisfaction with life as it was given to her. Edna was certainly before her time‚ this did not make her mature by any means nor the more insightful as she grew. Edna kept her childlike fire‚ acting impulsively‚ selfishly‚ and all around contradictory. Edna was discovering
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Section 1: Due Wednesday‚ March 8 Chapter I 1. What does the parrot say? What does it mean? How might these comments foreshadow what will occur in the novel? 2. Describe Leonce Pontellier. Specifically describe his reaction to the parrot‚ how he speaks to his wife‚ and his reaction to Mrs. Pontellier’s question about dinner. 3. Describe the Pontellier children. 4. What is the role of the "quadroon"? 5. Who is Robert Lebrun? What is his part in this story? Chapter II 1. Describe
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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 the book’s themes are women’s independence‚ sexuality‚ spirituality‚ marriage‚ motherhood‚ etc. Besides‚ as a model narrative master‚ Chopin’s writing technique was thoroughly
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“market revolution” and the religious “Second Great Awakening” shaped American society after 1815. Both of these developments affected women significantly‚ and contributed to their changing status both inside and outside the home. Throughout time‚ women’s roles and opportunities in the family‚ workplace‚ and society have greatly evolved. Women’s role in the family before 1815 was based around the idea of Republican Motherhood. Republican Motherhood is the idea that children should be raised to uphold
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Nowocin English 1100 October 2014 “Motherhood: Who Needs It?” Reader Response Asking who needs motherhood is a bit of an understatement‚ in my opinion. Instead we should go deeper into it. What needs motherhood and why? Is it people‚ males‚ females‚ society or the planet as a whole? In the essay “Motherhood: Who Needs It?” written by Betty Rollin in 1970‚ I find so many unanswered questions and issues and my goal now is to find the answers to them. What is motherhood? Why exactly do‚ or don’t‚ we
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In Anne Bradstreet’s book‚ “The Author to Her Book‚” a poem is metaphorically written about the struggles faced in motherhood. The author compares her book to a child‚ that she is later unsatisfied with‚ although her friends think it is good. The author tries to care for it‚ protect it‚ and wash its face just like a mother would care for her child. The mother (author) is far from perfect when it comes to parenting skills for this child (book). She feels as if her book will never be written the way
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changed economically‚ socially‚ and into the adoption of republican motherhood and cult of domesticity. During the time of the Revolutionary War‚ society regarded women as the teachers of the "sons of liberty" which resulted in a higher status for women; their new importance led to the cult of domesticity in which women began taking more opportunities and a new attitude towards life (True Womanhood). Both "republican motherhood" and
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called Why some Americans Manifest A sort of Fanatical Spiritualism‚ which is about the Second Great Awakening. Toequerville said in his observation that he thought it was strange that Americans would travel such great distances to hear a sermon that would last for days at a time. People would do this because they wanted to gain eternal life. One preacher who was important to The Second Great Awakening was Charles Finny. He was a preacher who was raised in New York‚ and he became a success in Oneida
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In her novel‚ The Awakening‚ Kate Chopin depicts a woman much like herself. In the novel‚ the reader finds Edna Pontellier‚ a young wife and mother who‚ like Chopin‚ struggles with her role in society. The Victorian era woman was expected to fill a domestic role. This role requires them to provide their husbands with a clean home‚ food on the table and to raise their children. They were pieces of property to their husbands‚ who cared more about their wives’ appearance than their feelings. Edna initially
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Motherhood can be a great honor and privilege to those who choose to be a mother. It can alter lives and change the basis of a woman’s world‚ as she creates life out of her own blood and flesh and becomes exposed to the purest form of love. Yet throughout history‚ motherhood has been warped; it is not always a choice for a woman to delight in and explore‚ it is sometimes forced upon her or used against her‚ making her a victim of her own womanhood. Although Addie Bundren‚ Sethe‚ and Medea made mistakes
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