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Tag: Kate Chopin

The Story Of An Hour: Analysis

Posted on September 29, 2019September 29, 2019 by JL Admin

In Donald F. Larsson’s entry on Kate Chopin in Critical Survey of Short Fiction, we learn that “consistently … strong-willed, independent heroines … [who] cast a skeptical eye on the institution of marriage” are very characteristic of her stories. In “The Story of an Hour,” we do not so much see as intuit Mrs. Mallard’s…

The Story Of An Hour: Setting

Posted on September 28, 2019September 28, 2019 by JL Admin

Social, Cultural Setting “The Story of an Hour” was published in 1894, an era in which many social and cultural questions occupied Americans’ minds. One of these, referred to as the “Woman Question,” involved which roles were acceptable for women to assume in society. Charles Darwin’s The Origin of Species (1892) had further incited this…

The Story Of An Hour: Symbolism, Literary Devices

Posted on September 28, 2019September 28, 2019 by JL Admin

The action of “The Story of an Hour” is simple: Mrs. Mallard, who suffers from “a heart trouble,” is informed about her husband’s demise in a train accident. At first she is beset by grief, but then she begins to feel a sense of freedom. When she leaves her room and descends the stairs, her…

The Story Of An Hour: Themes

Posted on September 28, 2019September 28, 2019 by JL Admin

Identity and Selfhood  Kate Chopin deals with the issues of female self-discovery and identity in “The Story of an Hour.” After Mrs. Mallard learns of her husband’s death, she is initially overcome with grief. But quickly she begins to feel a previously unknown sense of freedom and relief. At first, she is frightened of her…

The Story Of An Hour: Characters

Posted on September 28, 2019September 28, 2019 by JL Admin

Josephine  Josephine is Mrs. Mallard’s sister. It is Josephine who tells Mrs. Mallard of her husband’s death and who implores Louise to let her into the room after she has shut herself inside. Josephine, a woman who embodies the feminine ideal, assumes that Louise is suffering terribly from the news, not knowing that her sister…

The Story Of An Hour: Summary

Posted on September 28, 2019September 28, 2019 by JL Admin

Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour” is the story of an hour in the life of Mrs. Louise Mallard, a young woman whose wrinkles portray “repression” and “strength.” As the story begins, the narrator reveals that Mrs. Mallard has “heart trouble.” Her sister Josephine and her husband’s friend Richards have come to her after…

Marriage as an institution: Its political, social and psychological impact on men and women.

Posted on July 12, 2016 by admin

The story chosen for this essay is Kate Chopin’s Story of an Hour. It a compact yet dramatically powerful short story, located in the milieu of 19th century American South. The protagonist of the story is Louise Mallard, a woman somewhat trapped in an unfulfilling marriage to Mr. Brently Mallard. Louise is diagnosed with a…

The Importance of Trust in Human Relationships

Posted on January 24, 2014 by JL Admin

The underlying theme in the story Desiree’s Baby by Kate Chopin and the poem In Response to Executive Order 9066 by Dwight Okita is that of trust (or lack thereof). Both works of literature leave a lingering poignancy in the mind of the reader, probably because all can relate to the concept of trust as…

Feminist take on Carrie by Stephen King

Posted on November 5, 2012 by JL Admin

While novels such as Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’, Kate Chopin’s ‘The Awakening’, Margaret Atwood’s ‘Surfacing’ are essential entries in the feminist literary canon, Stephen King’s Carrie does not belong in this company.  The crucial difference is that almost all novels that explore femininity and women’s identity are written by women authors themselves.  Keeping…

The Storm by Kate Chopin: Analysis

Posted on May 27, 2012May 24, 2019 by JL Admin

Kate Chopin in her short yet gripping story The Storm explores a plethora of turbulent emotions of the protagonists in the backdrop of an unexpected storm. Though dubbed a sequel to her earlier work “At the Cadian Ball” (1892) it shares little resemblance to Calixta’s daring. All through, there is an undercurrent of nascent feminism….

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