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great awakening. The Great Awakening was when religion was sweeping throughout
New England with more conversions and church membership. ...
The Great Awakening. ... This brings us to the spark of the “First Great Awakening,”
which was the first of colonial America’s major religious revivals. ...
The Awakening. Kate Chopin's The Awakening is a work of fiction that tells
the story of Edna Pontellier, Southern wife and mother. ...
the great awakening dbq. ... The causes of the Great Awakening came directly from the
new liberal Enlightment ideas that greatly challenged the old-time religion. ...
The significance of the title The Awakening. ... The Awakening as a title does not represent
a one line summary that depicts what the story is going to about. ...
Submitted by huminahumina on December 14, 2005
Category: Book Reports
Words: 883 | Pages: 4
Views: 159
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I've never been one to notice symbols until this book. We talked about it in class and then when I reread it for this paper; I started to see more and more symbolism. I really enjoyed this short story and looking at the details lurking just under the surface. Although I enjoyed the obvious theme of being free to follow your dreams, not conforming to society's view of you, I am only going to write about the symbolism, since it surprised me so much to find it here, when I've never noticed it before.
Art in this story, to me, is a symbol of freedom and failure. Edna starts to paint and become more artistic. I never get the impression that her art is necessarily great. But she starts to express herself more and starts to see parts of herself that she hadn't noticed before. Her friend Mademoiselle Reisz uses art to differentiate herself from others. To make herself unique and it's very personal to her as you can see from when the group tried to get her to play the piano and she said she would only do it for Edna. She can also see that Edna is very unique and is awakening to a new self. She explains that a bird's wings must be strong to soar above tradition and prejudice. That she has seen people who tried to rise above it, but weren't strong enough. You can interpret the ending as a failure for Edna since she was unable to deal with people not accepting her new lifestyle.
Birds are symbolic all through the story, to me, signifying many things. The fact that she opens up the story with the mockingbird and parrot indicates there has to be some other meaning. At the beginning, the birds are free to be awake and loud, even annoying the guests. But they were never free to leave. Much like women throughout the story, they are free to speak about anything, but they are never free to leave. I think they symbolize freedom to leave as she left her husband; she left for the pigeon house. Mademoiselle Reisz uses birds as a metaphor for people...
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