Thursday, February 7, 2019
growaw Edna Pontellierââ¬â¢s Search for Self in Kate Chopins The Awakening :: Chopin Awakening Essays
The Search for Self in The Awakening In The Awakening, by Kate Chopin, Edna Pontellier is a married woman with children. However many of her actions seem akin those of a child. In fact, Edna Pontelliers life is an irony, in that her immaturity allows her to matured. Through forth this novel, thither are many casings of this because Edna is continuously searching for herself in the novel. One example of how Ednas immaturity allows her to mature is when she starts to cry when LeVonce, her husband, verifys she is not a good mother. He reproached his wife with her inattention, her habitual neglect of the children. If it was not a mothers place to look after children, whose on kingdom was it?(13). Edna, instead of telling her husband that she had taken care of her children, began to cry give care a baby after her husband reprimanded her. Mrs. Pontellier was by that time exhaustively awake. She began to cry a littleKshe thrust her face, steaming and wet, into the bend of her arm, and she went on crying there, not caring any longer to dry her face, her eyes, her arms,(13,14). These divide made Edna look as if she was still a child and that she is tire of being treated as a child by her husband. These disunite also showed her she did not like where she was, a sign of maturity. Her tears act her first awakening. Although the next morning, after Edna had cried the night before had to go and say good-bye to her husband because he was leaving on a concern trip. Edna acted immaturely around him again when he gave her half the money he won the night before. It will buy a handsome married couple present for Sister Janet she exclaimed, smoothing out the bills as she counted them one by one,(15). Edna is unfit by all of her husbands money. Another example of how Ednas immaturity allows her to mature is when Edna swam like a baby when she went swimming for the first time, and she had over estimated her power. at one time she turned and looked toward the s hore, toward the people she had left there. She had not gone any long distanceKshe made no mention of her encounter with death and her consume of terror, except to say to her husband, I thought I should have perished out there alone.
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