"Work cited page for kate chopin the storm" Essays and Research Papers

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    March 17‚ 2006 It’s Not the Sights‚ It’s the Sounds By TIM SULTAN I WANTED to kiss Lori Austin‚ the waitress behind the counter of August 25‚ a diner near Wales Center‚ N.Y. I had been pretending to look at the wall art — a sunset landscape painted on a circular saw — but was actually straining to listen in on the conversation three elderly women were having at a nearby table. I was not having any success. The more I listened‚ the more quietly they talked. "Thee-at painting?" Ms. Austin suddenly

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    Women’s Rights Kate Chopin is an American feminist fiction writer and a woman ahead of the time. Similar to the female characters in her stories‚ Chopin was an independent woman. She would often smoke cigarettes or walk in the streets unaccompanied; these practices were considered unusual for a nineteenth-century woman to do. “The Story of an Hour” is one of Chopin ’s feministic short stories that focus on women and their views on marriage. It was published in 1894 and shows self-assertion when

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    'Ripe Figs' - Kate Chopin

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    Goranson � PAGE �1� Amanda Goranson Eng 113-IN1 Dorothy Morrison January 17‚ 2008 ’Ripe Figs’ What does the title _Ripe Figs_ bring to mind? The first thought was of the word ’old’ while others may think of a fruit. There is a difference between ’old’ and fruit. In _Ripe Figs_‚ Kate Chopin provides the readers with two characters‚ Maman-Nainaine and Babette‚ whom differ from each other not only physically but also in their perceptions. Within the words and descriptions that Chopin uses‚ one

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    Kate Chopin is an author that tends to relate the books that she writes to her own life. In “The Awakening” this style of writing is very apparent. To demonstrate these many similarities I have written a type B psychoanalytical analysis of this book. “The Awakening” reflects Chopin’s life‚ views on life‚ and places she’s lived in many obvious and subtle ways. In the book “The Awakening” Kate Chopin relates to many of the characters and their attributes. Two characters that Chopin best relates too

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    Kate Chopin The Blind Man

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    In the story ’The Blind Man’ Kate Chopin chooses to make the main character poor and blind to emphasize how isolated people can be if they’re different. An effective and memorable character is created by the blind man being created as a representation of a whole community of less fortunate people. This allows people to connect with the blind man; making the story memorable. Kate Chopin makes the reader feel what it is like in the blind man’s position‚ by describing the man in such detail. For

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    Kate Chopin There are many women who fought for their rights at the turn of the century‚ such as Alice Paul‚ Margret Sanger‚ and Susan B. Anthony. Kate Chopin didn’t really fight women’s rights; she brought out to light the gender issues that were occurring at the time. Chopin also believed that women should have the same rights as men and used her literature to convey her purpose‚ which made her a key component to the fight against women’s suffrage. What influenced her work so deeply was the fact

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    In the story The Locket by Kate Chopin‚ the main character Octavie is devastated when her lover Edmond has to go to war. Before he leaves‚ Octavie puts her most prized earthy possession around his neck; her locket. She later gets the locket back when a priest finds it on a man’s body at the battle site. She is horrified to know that Edmond has died in battle. In her grief‚ she plans to live her life as plainly as possible and to never love again. However by the end of the story‚ Octavie finds

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    Was Kate Chopin a Sexist? Kate Chopin as a women and writer was very ahead of her time. When women were supposed to be quiet and obey their husbands‚ Chopin had the guts to speak her mind through the characters in many of her short stories and novels. An example "The story of an Hour". The Story of an hour pulls the reader into the mind of a woman realizing her spirit and potential and she can now be what she wants to be- free and independent from her husband. The story is about a women finding

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    simultaneously bringing the whole story together. One good example the author also used in “The Storm” that exemplifies my second theory of what good fiction should be is the words she used to describe the intensity of the situation coming from the rising moments during the storm. She writes “The rain beat softly upon the shingles‚ inviting them to drowsiness and sleep. But they dared not yield.” (Chopin 272). The words the author used created an intensifying moment that could keep a reader enticed

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    In the 1890’s when Chopin lived‚ and wrote “The story of an hour” women were not equal. They did not have a life outside of their duties to the man in charge; whether it is their father‚ brother‚ or husband.  The realization that her husband had not been killed in the train accident‚ therefor “When the doctors came‚ they said she had died of heart disease—of the joy that kills.” (Chopin 607)  Overwhelming feelings of freedom‚ and then that loss of freedom are what killed Mrs. Mallard. Not what the

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