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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During the 1730s‚ an extremely popular religious idea‚ Great Awakening‚ was spread across Europe and the British colonies in New England. The Great Awakening was a series of religious revivals which prompted a closer relationship with god. The revivals also represented a commitment showing a deeper devotion to their religion or “religion of the heart” (Walker 75). A new belief was adopted‚ one must ask for god’s grace to clear one’s sins in order for him/her to go to heaven. Minister would travel
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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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What was the primary cause of the Second Great Awakening? * The Industrial Revolution transformed the ways people worked‚ and it created an important separation between public and private life. * While the forces of the market may have created tremendous anxiety for some‚ others used the market to advertise upcoming revivals and church meetings. * Noteworthy religious innovations helped lay the groundwork for the Second Great Awakening‚ including circuit riding‚ voluntary associations
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was a gender role for men and women. The men went to work while the women were “mother wives” whose main job was to to care of the children and help the family. This way of life was predominantly unquestioned‚ except in Kate Chopin’s The Awakening. In The Awakening‚ Edna Pontellier‚ a wealthy “mother wife”‚ tries to fight her gender role and become independent. Edna Pontellier’s strive for independence leads to struggles with the society’s gender role upon women. Edna’s independence causes familial
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of women was to be seen as a graceful entity who solely looked after the home affairs. Throughout this period‚ their freedom of expression was limited because they usually followed this unwritten code regardless of how they actually felt. In The Awakening by Kate Chopin‚ Madame Ratignolle is the epitome of how a woman was expected to act and dress. However‚ the words used in the passage that describes Madame Ratignolle suggest that her appearance is shaped by society and she follows their guidelines
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in place. Kate Chopin uses many symbols in her novel‚ The Awakening‚ to portray the theme that women are subject to specific gender roles‚ and when they do not defy them they lose their identity and become trapped. Edna Pontellier becomes trapped in her marriage with Léonce. One way Chopin signifies entrapment is with birds. The first line of the novel states‚ “A green and yellow parrot‚ which hung in a cage outside the door…” (Chopin 5). The parrot is trapped inside it’s cage just like Edna is
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