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The Awakening Edna 2

The Awakening: Edna’s Essay, Research Paper


The Awakening: Edna’s


Steven Schwartz January 3, 1997 Mr. Speight


The society of Grand Isle places many expectations on its women to belong to


men and be subordinate to their children. Edna Pontellier’s society, therefore,


abounds with “mother-women,” who “idolized their children, worshipped their


husbands, and esteemed it to a holy privilege to efface themselves as


individuals”. The characters of Adele Ratignolle and Mademoiselle Reisz


represent what society views as the suitable and unsuitable woman figures.


Mademoiselle Ratignolle as the ideal Grand Isle woman, a home-loving mother and


a good wife, and Mademoiselle Reisz as the old, unmarried, childless, musician


who devoted her life to music, rather than a man. Edna oscillates between the


two identities until she awakens to the fact that she needs to be an individual,


but encounters the resistance of society’s standards to her desire.


Kate Chopin carefully, though subtly, establishes that Edna does not neglect


her children, but only her mother-woman image. Chopin portrays this idea by


telling the reader “?Mrs. Pontellier was not a mother-woman. The mother-woman


seemed to prevail that summer at Grand Isle”. Edna tries on one occasion to


explain to Adele how she feels about her children and how she feels about


herself, which greatly differs from the mother-woman image. She says: “I would


give up the unessential; I would give my money; I would give my life for my


children; but I wouldn’t give myself. I can’t make it more clear; it’s only


something I am beginning to comprehend, which is revealing itself to me.” This


specifically contrasts the mother-woman idea of self-sacrificing for your


husband and children. Also, the “something . . . which is revealing itself”


does not become completely clear to Edna herself until just before the end, when


she does indeed give her life, but not her self for her children’s sake.


Although Edna loves her children she does not confuse her own life with theirs.


Similarly to Edna’s relationship with her children is that with her husband,


Leonce. The Grand Isle society defines the role of wife as full devotion


towards their husband and to self-sacrafice for your husband. Edna never adhered


to the societies definition, even at the beginning of the novel. For example,


the other ladies at Grand Isle “all declared that Mr. Pontellier was the best


husband in the world.” And “Mrs. Pontellier was forced to admit she knew of


none better”. By using words like “forced” and “admi

t” Chopin illustrates


Edna’s true feelings towards Leonce. That she married him not because there are


none better, but because there are also none worse. Edna’s leaving Leonce’s


mansion is another important detail when considering her rebellion against the


mother-woman idea. By moving to her own residence, Edna takes a colossal step


towards autonomy, a direct violation of the mother-woman image. Throughout The


Awakening, Edna increasingly distances herself from the image of the mother-


woman, until her suicide, which serves as the total opposite of the mother-woman


image.


Adele Ratignolle and Mademoiselle Reisz, the two important female subsidary


characters, provide the two different identities Edna associates with. Adele


serves as the perfect “mother-woman” in The Awakening, being both married and


pregnant, but Edna does not follow Adele’s footsteps. For Edna, Adele appears


unable to perceive herself as an individual human being. She possesses no sense


of herself beyond her role as wife and mother, and therefore Adele exists only


in relation to her family, not in relation to herself or the world. Edna


desires individuality, and the identity of a mother-woman does not provide that.


In contrast to Adele Ratignolle, Mademoiselle Reisz offers Edna an alternative


to the role of being yet another mother-woman. Mademoislle Reisz has in


abundance the autonomy that Adele completely lacks. But Reisz’s life lacks love,


while Adele abounds in it. Mademoiselle Reisz’s loneliness makes clear that an


adequate life cannot build altogether upon autonomy. Although she has a secure


sense of her own individuality and autonomy, her life lacks love, friendship, or


warmth.


What Edna chooses for her identity is a combination of Adele Ratignolle and


Mademoiselle Reisz. More honest in self-awareness than Adele, more dependent on


human relationships than Reisz.


In The Awakening the woman’s existance intertwines with her maternal nature.


Edna’s sense of herself as a complete person makes impossible her role of wife


and mother as defined by her society; yet she discovers that her role of mother


also makes impossible her continuing development as an autonomous individual.


So her thoughts as she walks into the sea comment profoundly on the identity


problems that women face: “She thought of Leonce and the children. They were a


part of her life. But they need not have thought that they could possess her,


body and soul”. Unable to have a full human existence, Edna chooses to have


none at all.


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