Thursday, September 30, 2010

Banned Book: The Awakening by Kate Chopin

Before there was Elizabeth Gilbert and Eat Pray Love, there was Kate Chopin and The Awakening.  Chopin penned The Awakening in 1899.  It was the Victorian era.  It was a time of marked constraint.  Propriety was a top priority. 

Edna Pontellier, Chopin's protagonist, was anything but the ideal Victorian woman.  Edna's actions flew in the face of Victorian notions of proper female behavior and familial obligations.  The book outlines Edna's awakening.  Edna's is a journey of self-actualization, self-understanding, self-reflection.

Edna is a twenty-eight year old housewife.  She is defined by society, and in the beginning by herself, as a wife and a mother.  All other aspects of her personality are pushed to the edges, overshadowed by Edna-Wife and Edna-Mother. 

While on vacation in Louisiana Edna begins to realize her own dissatisfaction with her existence as Edna-Wife-Mother.  She begins to search for happiness, and that search leads her to behave in ways that are not socially acceptable. 

If you want to read about strong women, real women--you'll want to read about Edna Pontellier.  You want sex? Scandal?  Adultery?  Go to your local library and check out The Awakening.  It's so shocking it was banned. 

2 comments:

  1. This sounds great! I was about to start the House of Mirth by Edith Wharton and this book is appealing in similar ways.

    ReplyDelete
  2. One of my very favorite books!!! I could read it over and over and discover something new in the words each time. Eat Pray Love cannot hold a candle to this classic!

    ReplyDelete