Edna Pontellier's character in The Awakening
Date Submitted: 04/11/2003 02:12:43
Edna Pontellier
The Awakening, which was written by Kate Chopin, received a great deal of criticism when it was first published in 1899. Much of the controversy over the novel arose because of the character of Edna Pontellier. Edna was very much unlike the women of her time. In today's terms she would be considered a rebel. Edna opposed the traditional roles of society that kept many restraints on the women of the 1800's. According to
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very interesting in the way it enfolds. All throughout the novel you have a women looking for self-deliverance which is being achieved through artistry. Then she finally achieves her goal of self-discovery by becoming an artist and very soon after that she loses it which leads to her to suicide. Stone does a very good job of going through the stages of her artistry which envovles her self-deliverance and explaining how it all correlates together.
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