Saturday, July 20, 2019
Kate Chopins Awakening is Not a Tragedy Essay -- Chopin Awakening Es
Kate Chopins' Awakening is Not a Tragedy     à     à  Ã  Ã   When we think of a tragedy, thoughts of  lost love and torments abound.      The most human of emotions, sorrow, overwhelms us. We agonize over the     tragedy, and the tragic figure. We lose sight of reality, enthralled by      the suspense, captured by the Irony that, "we know" what plight lies ahead       for the characters. We feel the suffering and the helplessness of the      characters as the tragedy unwinds. Although Kate Chopins' The Awakening      is a powerful story, it is by no means a tragedy.à   The     Awakening does not posses the necessary components of a tragedy. There is     no tragic figure, there is no tragic plot or theme, and the ending is far     from tragic.     à       à  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   First, tragic figures must  captivate the audience. They must create     an atmosphere that is shrouded in irony, suspense and mystery. These     figures must also make the audience love them, feel for them and  experience     the anguish and pain they will undergo. King Lear is a great example of a     tragic figure. He appeals to the reader, and captures their attention.  The     reader ends up sympathizing for him, and wanting him to overcome the     obstacles which block his path. He motivates the emotion of the audience     and controls their feelings. Edna Pontellier does not have the depth of     character or ability to be a tragic figure. From the opening chapters she     is portrayed as a troubled woman, one who is captured within a society     where she does not belong. Her marriage to Leonce is one of convenience,     there is no love, no passion, and no affection between them. Edna  portrays     a woman who is caught up within a life which does not suit her. She is,  in   ...              ...t structure and     conclusion, which are essential aspects of all tragedies.     à       Works Cited      Allen, Priscilla. "Old Critics and New: The Treatment of Chopin's The  Awakening." In The Authority of Experience: Essays in Feminist Criticism, ed.  Arlyn Diamond and Leeà   R. Edwards. Amherst: University of Massachusetts  Press, 1977, 224-238.     Chopin, Kate.à   The Awakening.à   A Norton Critical Edition:à    Kate Chopin:à   Theà   Awakening.à   Ed. Margo Culley.à   2nd  ed.à   New York:à   W.W. Norton, 1994.à  Ã   3-109.     Seyersted, Per, and Emily Toth, eds.à   A Kate Chopin Miscellany.à    Natchitoches:à  Ã   Northwestern State University Press, 1979.     Sullivan, Barbara. "Introduction to The Awakening." In The Awakening, ed.  Barbara Sullivan. New York: Signet, 1976.      Toth, Emily. "Kate Chopin's The Awakening as Feminist Criticism." Louisiana  Studies, 15 (1976), 241-251.      à                        
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