Wednesday, May 29, 2019
growaw Edna Pontellierââ¬â¢s Identity in Kate Chopins The Awakening :: Chopin Awakening Essays
Identity in The awaken   Kate Chopins The Awakening is about a womans growing sense of identity. The novel takes place on an island south of New Orleans and in New Orleans. Edna Pontellier is 28 years old when she wakes up. Her husband Leonce Pontellier is much older than she - forty years old. The Awakening opens when Mr. Pontellier - a businessman- is disturbed by the noise some parrots are doing. They repeat Allez vous-en which means go away. It sounds such as an invitation to Edna to leave her cage of marriage. This is what she is doing in locomote throughout the novel. The parrot image is very interesting because parrots can be trained to talk, and they repeat only what someone taught them. Edna refuses more and more to follow the rules women are trained in. She starts to look for a self-determined life. In Chapter VI Chopin writes Mrs. Pontellier was startle to realize her position in the universe as a human being. She realizes this after sledding to the beach w ith Robert for a bath in the sea. The sea and swimming play an important role in this novel. The sea is an archetype of death and rebirth. In the beginning Edna experiences the touch of the sea as sensuous, and she seems to feel renewed. At the end she enters the water of the Gulf naked and feels like some newborn creature. When she dies, it seems that death and rebirth defend met and the circle has closed. ( Teachers comment Something is very wrong with the grammar here). To underline that Edna is different from the typical women at Grand Isle and New OrleansChopin creates the character of Adele Ratignolle. She is described as the human body of the mother- woman. She seems to accept and enjoy her role as a wife and mother. She knows her duties and (in XIV) leaves Edna alone because Monsieur Ratignolle is alone at home and he detested above all things to be left alone. When Edna tells Adele that she would never sacrifice herself for her children, Adele does not understand. She fu lfills her role as a mother and wife, whereas Edna wants to define her role new. She asks in Chapter XIII How many years ache I slept? and Robert mentions later All but the hundred years when you were sleeping.
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