Awakening by Kate Chopin

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reissue)

  • Pub. Date: February 1982
  • 192pp
  • Sales Rank: 2,027

    Reader Rating: (139 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Sensual" See All

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    • Overview
    • Editorial Reviews
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 1982
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 192pp
    • Sales Rank: 2,027

    Synopsis

    First published in 1899, this controversial novel of a New Orleans wife's search for love outside a stifling marriage shocked readers. Today, it remains a first-rate narrative with superb characterization. New introductory Note.

    Annotation

    An American classic of sexual expression that paved the way for the modern novel, The Awakening is both a remarkable novel in its own right and a startling reminder of how far women in this century have come. The story of a married woman who pursues love outside a stuffy, middle-class marriage, the novel portrays the mind of a woman seeking fulfillment of her essential nature.

    Times

    Kate Chopin is a pioneer in the treatment of sexuality in American literature… She does not speak only to women,but she speaks most powerfully about them.

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    Biography

    Kate Chopin was born in St. Louis, Missouri, In 1851. She began writing shortly after her Husband's death and, from 1889 until her own Death, her stories and other miscellaneous Writings appeared in Vogue, Youth's companion, Atlantic Monthly, Century, Saturday Evening Post, and other publications. In addition to The Awakening, Mrs. Chopin published another novel, At Fault, and two collections of short stories and sketches, Bayou Folk and A Night at Acadie. The publication of The Awakening in 1899 occasioned shocked and angry response from reviewers all over the country. The book was taken off the shelves of the St. Louis mercantile library and its author was barred from the fine arts club. Kate Chopin died in 1904.

    Customer Reviews

    AWESOMEby LVB4H8T

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    October 07, 2009: A fascinating glimpse into a world that is past -- a world that was on the brink of change. Even if this were not a gripping story in its own right (which, by all means, it is), "The Awakening" would be worth reading simply for this social-historical vision.

    This edition of The Awakening is a beautifully compiled work. I found it incredibly insightful as I used it for research papers in high school and college. The essays and criticism from Chopin's era are priceless. It was so helpful to have those along with the text, they really gave insight one could not find elsewhere. The Awakening continues to be my favorite book, this my favorite edition. If you are going to write a paper on this book or Chopin there is no other book that will help you more. This was a shocking novel in 1899 but today Pontellier's turmoil and dilemma would be neither unusual nor frightening and perhaps that is why modern man and woman usually succeed in handling these situations in a far better way than Pontellier.

    I Also Recommend: Only Love Is Real, Love's Eclipse Of The Heart, The Awakening and Selected Short Fiction (Barnes & Noble Classics Series).

    Loyalty and Deception in Chopin and Wilson by K. O'Dowdby kodowd

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    September 10, 2009: Kristy O'Dowd

    The Awakening and The Piano Lesson share a common theme of loyalty and deception. In both books, the main characters will to have a different life than they do, but the outcomes are very different.

    In The Awakening, the author, Kate Chopin looks at loyalty from a negative perspective and causes the main character, Edna Pontellier to be disloyal to her husband, Leonce. She wanted to break away from him so she would not be a conformist and did not have to live her life in a certain way. She deceived him by cheating on him with Alceé Arobin and Robert. Although she did not actually sleep with Robert, I believe that the dynamic between the two was greater because she was in love with him even though she was "supposed to" be in love with her husband.

    The book shows her struggle to find herself, but ultimately, she loses herself in a disloyal, undignified mess. I think there is a definite parallel in this book between Edna's swimming and her love life. She is never happy. When she cannot swim, she is discontented, but in the end, swimming is the very thing that ends her life. When she is with her husband, she is unhappy and wants something better. However, when she has an affair with Alceé, she is still not happy or pleased. I think that her swimming symbolized her will to be free and have a mind of her own, but it backfired on her because it literally took her life, whereas her disloyalty and will for freedom took her life figuratively.

    In the other book, The Piano Lesson, the author shows a different twist on loyalty. Beatrice, the main character in this book, shows a die-hard loyalty to her dead mother and father's piano. She will not give it up for anything and does not give in to the temptations of wealth and safety. Boy Willie, her brother tried to deceive her by selling the piano behind her back and reaping half of the benefits for himself.

    Both of these novels represent the passions of loyalty and deception. I also think these themes share a common link with freedom, which is the overall sought after goal.


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