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FREE ESSAY ON KATE CHOPIN GIVES A WOMAN'S VOICE TO REALISM

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Kate Chopin: Woman Out of Her Time
A comparison of three short stories by Kate Chopin. -- 1,960 words; MLA

Kate Chopin’s “A Respectable Woman”
This paper discusses use of intertextuality in Chopin’s “A Respectable Woman”. -- 1,570 words;

Kate Chopin and Historical Realism
Examines themes in two works by Kate Chopin to show realism from her time period. -- 785 words; MLA

A Voice of Her Own: Kate Chopin’s Edna Pontellier
How children, through play learn about their world and how this knowledge has been used. -- 1,760 words;

Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour"
This paper analyzes the situation of women in Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour". -- 1,610 words; APA

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KATE CHOPIN GIVES A WOMAN'S VOICE TO REALISM

Kate Chopin succeeded in giving a woman's voice to realism. While doing this she 
sacrificed her career. This seems to be a higher order of feminism than repeating the 
story of a woman as victim...Kate Chopin gives her female protagonist the central role, 
normally reserved for the man, in a meditation on identity and culture, consciousness,
and 
art. (Robinson 3) The role of woman in the society Chopin creates is of special interest

and relevance. (Robinson 6)
Introduction to Kate Chopin
Before Kate Chopin came onto the writing scene, women had an insignificant role 
in society. Women never did anything that would cause some sort of controversy. All 
literature focused around a male main character as well. Most stories being written at
the 
time were about male characters and their stories, not the women. Kate Chopin changed 
that. 
Kate Chopin was born Katherine O'Flaherty. She was born in St. Louis, Missouri 
in 1851. Her father was an Irish immigrant and her mother was of French descent. They 
introduced Kate to music and writing at an early age. (Elements of Literature 481)
At nineteen she married Oscar Chopin, who was a French Creole from New 
Orleans. They had six children together. After her husband's sudden death IN???, she 
moved back to ST. Louis and began to write. In 1890 she published her first novel. Her 
stories concerned the life of French Creole in Louisiana and were praised for their
accurate 
portrayal of the French. Her themes are a much more controversial matter: it was the 
repression of women in Victorian America. This theme was presented in her famous novel 
The Awakening. (Robinson 15)
The Awakening
Kate Chopin's most well known piece of work is The Awakening. This is her first 
full novel she wrote. It's an extraordinary piece of work about a Creole woman who is not

a good example of the conventional mother in that society. Kate Chopin's popularity was 
evident until critical disapproval of this novel. (Allen 54)
The main character is Edna Pontiellier. A rather handsome woman. Her face was 
captivating by reason of a certain frankness of expression and a contradictory subtle
play 
of features. Her manner was engaging. (Chopin 4) Unlike many other women characters 
of that time. Edna smoked, and often took walks along the beach, unescorted. That was 
something most women would never be caught doing. Kate Chopin created and 
unforgettable character that other women writers of that time would seldom create or
write 
about. (Allen 23)
Edna Pontiellier is a happily married woman in the beginning of the novel. She is 
living in a rich New Orleans neighborhood. She is somewhat of an outcast because she
does unconventional things. Eventhough she is married and is supposed to be with her 
husband, she is often seen with another young man. This character is Robert Leburn. The 
more time Edna spends with Robert, the more she becomes attached. Other characters in 
this novel openly speculate what is going on between these two.
As the novel continues, Edna begins her awakening. She realizes that she is 
falling in love with Robert. She also feels much stronger as an independent woman. As 
the novel draws to a close, Edna and Robert confess their love for eachother. Later on, 
Edna goes for a swim in the ocean, she goes out further than any other woman. While out 
in the ocean, she realized that her awakening is complete and that she can never live in
this 
society.
Kate Chopin received a great deal of criticism for this novel. Many women during 
this time were going through something like Edna's awakening to independence in this 
novel. Numerous critics and readers banned this book and gave it bad reviews. A few 
loved it. (Moers 10) The Awakening is the one novel that ruined her career, but it also
is 
one of the great masterpieces ever written. This novel is not a simulated case study, but

an exploration of the solitary soul still enchanted but the primal charged, and intimate

encounter of naked sensation with the astonishing world. (Robinson 20)
Kate Chopin's Short Stories
Kate Chopin has wrote many short stories. Most of these stories are about 
women overcoming obstacles. The main characters are usually women. She wrote a short 
story called A Pair of Silk Stockings. This story was about a woman who has found a 
suprise cache of money, and plans to buy clothes and necessities for her family. Instead

she goes and buys a pair of silk stockings. Kate Chopin often writes about a womans 
responsibilities to her family, her community, and herself and the need to be
independent. 
(Robinson 19)
Kate Chopin also wrote another story called The Storm. This story was about 
infidelity during a thunderstorm. This piece of work was condemned because of it's 
sexual openness. She was just writing what really went on in life, but no one wanted to 
admit it. She was writing what she felt, and she wanted to give a woman's voice to 
realism. 
The Critics and Critism
After she published her novel The Awakening, many people banned it and refused 
to read it. It was dismissed as gilded dirt. (234) The were shocked and appalled 
by what Kate Chopin had written. They didn't think that a woman should be talking and 
writing about such things. (Wilson 184)
She was also given bad reviews for some of her other short stories. The critics 
would have liked her if she wasn't so open about these kind of topics. Her short story 
The Storm was given some of the same reviews as her famous novel The Awakening. 
The Storm, however, didn't cause quite such a stir like The Awakening. Through all of 
the criticism, she gained a lot of fame. The reviews also helped to sell more copies of
The 
Awakening.
Conclusion
Kate Chopin attempted to give a woman's voice to realism. She also sacrificed her
career while doing this. She was harshly criticized by the critics and readers, both male

and female. Her novel The Awakening gave a woman's voice to the public, and let people 
know what women were thinking concerning marriage, responsibility, and infidelity.
She overcame boundaries and was the first woman writer to do these things. She 
accomplished her goals, and made a major impact on writing. Kate Chopin influenced 
many other women writers today. She was a pioneer of her own time, in her portrayal of 
women's desires of independence and control of their own sexuality. (Toth 481)
Bibliography
1. Allen, Priscilla. Old Critics and New: The treatment of Chopin's The Awakening. 
The Authority of Experience: Essays in Feminist Criticism, eds. Arlyn Diamond and Lee 
R. Edwards. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1997.
2. Chopin, Kate. A Pair of Silk Stockings Elements of Literature. Orlando, Florida: 
Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc., 1993 481-484
3. Moers, Ellen. Literary Women: Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1976
4. Q. Arpin, Susan Allen Toth. Elements of Literature, 5th Course. Orlando, Florida: 
Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, Inc., 1993

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