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Saturday, March 23, 2019

Essay --

The years that are g unriv whollyed come out like dreamsif one power go on sleeping and dreamingbut to wake up and findoh well Perhaps it is better to wake up after(prenominal) all, even to suffer, rather than to remain a dupe to illusions all ones life says Edna at her appointment with Doctor Mandelet (151). In Kate Chopins The awaken, Edna is constantly at odds with her own fears her independence however, over the scat of the novel, Chopin reveals a deeper side to Edna. She does not fear universe alone, she is afraid of being without herself. It is also revealed that her society is often against her self-discovering favoring a more traditional distaff constituent. In its lowest scene, The Awakening offers readers a more complex system to obtain freedom, death. Ednas suicide reveals her final awakening, breaking free from all the pressures that bind her. Ednas awakenings in Grand Isle and in cutting Orleans set her up for failure by forcing her to under stand her lose of options. Ednas first awakening is when she realizes that she is not happy with her life as a housewife. This awakening is realized while Edna is at a dinner party with Md. Ratignolle and her economize. When she arrived home, she felt depressed rather than soothed (75). She then goes on and stomps upon her man and wife ring (76). This symbolizes Ednas desire to escape from marriage altogether, but her softness to crush the ring shows her powerlessness to break free from her imprisonment. Edna breaks through the role given to her by society she learns her own identity independent of her husband and children. Edna later realizes that she cannot be the same as Mademoiselle Reisz. Edna does not accept the carefree attitude of Reisz and stills struggles with social appro... ... and escape. With her death she is surrendering herself to freedom. Her death by ocean is a symbol of her allowing herself to overcome her ambiguity about her personhood. In conclusion , The Awakening ended in the only way it could have, with Ednas death. Ednas deprivation of options and her fear of solitude lead to her death. However, Chopin turned her death into something much more meaningful than just a way to end the novel. Ednas final awakening is realizing that she cannot do the things that wanted to do. With this she chooses death before overcoming her problems. Kate Chopin juxtaposes this fear of life history alone with her fear of dying in a way that makes Edna seem triumphant. She revealed her suicide not as a defeat but as a triumph over social pressure and fears. Chopin used Ednas death symbolizes her final awakening and her ability to overcome her obstacles.

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