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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page analysis of Kate Chopin’s The Awakening. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAawc.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
lacking in her life. It is the story of a woman who realizes she wants more from life than to merely be a wife and mother. During the time this
was written that was essentially the only role available to honorable women. The following paper examines and analyzes the story. The paper also agrees and disagrees with two different criticisms
of the stories. The Awakening by Kate Chopin The Awakening is a very powerful novel that invokes a great deal of thought about life and the position of
women during the time period. It is a novel that is not necessarily about feminism, as many would argue perhaps, but a story about a woman who simply cannot seem
to find any happiness in her life. On the other hand it is also a story about a person who will likely never be satisfied in her life for whatever
reason. The character of Edna would like to be more than she is. She would love to be an artist, but she does not believe that is her calling.
She would love to be a musician, but that too is not her calling or gift. She seems to want some magical answer to life and there is, in all
honesty, no such thing for anyone. She seeks happiness in many avenues of pursuit but she may well be unrealistic in all she pursues for it seems as though she
wants magical happiness in her being. Because she can never find a true and powerful answer, and because she cannot accept what beauty she has in her life, she ultimately
kills herself. It is a powerful novel that urges explication and as such is truly a work of worthy note. One of the most obvious themes involves social class
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