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    The social class of women and the difficulties they confront are being explored in this essay. In the two stories — “The Necklace” and “The Story of an Hour”‚ both female protagonists are trapped by strict order of society depriving their freedom and status. Social status and family background are important to women because that is the only way they can gain respect and get their desires. However‚ in “The Necklace”‚ women had neither rank nor class in the late 1800s in France. Their beauty and charm

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    Professor Credito ENG 115-550 October 31‚ 2013 Paper # 3 “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin is a very interesting story about a young married women and her response to the news of her husband’s death in a train accident. Though the story is short‚ it touches the reader’s feelings and seems complete to depict the hidden feelings of a widow who discovers freedom rather than despair after her husband’s death. Chopin dramatizes the story in a very fascinating manner with all the details of the feelings

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    equal rights movement for women. Many people philosophised why the oppression of women was so apparent‚ among these people were activists and writers like The Suffragettes‚ especially Emmeline Pankhurst in the late 1890’s‚ who focussed on the legal side of the movement. Then de Beauvoir and Betty Friedman in the 1950-60‚ who focussed on the expectation of women in society and their place in society. Both Friedman and de Beauvoir came to the conclusion that the oppression of women and the view of them

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    understand more‚ so that we may fear less.” Kate Chopin’s‚ The Story of an Hour is based in the late 19th century where women are fighting harder to get the same rights as men. Brently and Louise Mallard are husband and wife‚ in the late 19th century where some women were treated as housewives. The men were always superior to women and women were considered physically weaker nor allowed to socialize as freely as men. In The Story of an Hour‚ Louise Mallard symbolizes the open window in the concept of

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    Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour”‚ was published over a century ago in 1894‚ but even with its age the story manages to be relevant in modern times. Upon first glance the short story is fleeting at only two pages in length and lasts for only an hour and due to this it could be seen as simple. This short story tells the tale of Louise Mallard‚ who has heart issues‚ learns from her sister Josephine that her husband‚ Brently Mallard was killed in train accident. Upon hearing this terrible news‚ she

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    In Kate Chopin’s 1894 work‚ “The Story of an Hour”‚ symbolism and figurative language are utilized to express the central theme of freedom. Mrs. Mallard believes the she has been granted freedom in the form of the death of Brently Mallard‚ and‚ ultimately‚ finds freedom from her unhappy marriage in death. The author immediately starts off by mentioning Mrs. Mallard’s heart trouble‚ which could symbolize her unhappy marriage. Chopin also tells of how Mrs. Mallard doesn’t take the bad news of her

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    course of people’s lives. World War 2‚ for example‚ changed the role of women. They stepped in to do man labor while the men were at war. Women soon realized they are capable of working as doctors‚ electricians‚ mail carrier and others after experiencing it. That is when the workforce expanded for women. Another way World War 2 changed women’s lives in a less obvious way was when the only few men came back after the war‚ a lot of women married these few survived ones‚ partly because of their relief the

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    The oppression of women has been a large issue in the past 150 years. The first wave of feminism was a movement during the late 1800s and early 1900s with the name ‘first wave’ was given during the second wave – symbolising the constant inequality that will imaginably preoccupy the female gender for years to come. This initiation of women’s rights was focused on a political change including the successful and historical change of women’s right to vote‚ known as the suffragette movement. The second

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    Throughout the late 19th century women questioned the oppressive and stifling patriarchal society of the time and demanded augmented rights and freedom. In “The Story of an Hour” Kate Chopin contemplates the existence and effects of societal biases towards women and the negative attributes of marriage as an institution. In particular‚ Chopin employs the downstairs of the home in the beginning of the story to characterize society’s notion of women as weak and at the end of the story to assert the effects of

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    ingrained women as an inferior creature to their male counterpart. The insistence of the Roman Catholic Church that priests have to be male reflected the power of men. In addition‚ philosophers such as Plato and Aristotle have declared women to be weaker than men in nature‚ therefore creating the inequity in gender we know of today. Inequality between these genders is the fruit of history’s assertion of man’s power to objectify woman‚ degrading their value down to a slave. The oppression of women in such

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