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Kate Chopin's The Awakening: Ambiguity as Art

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2009

Kenneth M. Rosen
Affiliation:
Dickinson College

Extract

Fifty-three years before Ernest Hemingway wrote The Old Man and the Sea, Kate Chopin went beyond simple allegory to create something which critics, until only very recently, have been unable to define. In 1936 Arthur Hobson Quinn wrote that the basic fault of The Awakening ‘lies in Edna's utter selfishness, which deprives her of sympathy. The standards are Continental rather than Creole, and the novel belongs rather among studies of morbid psychology than local color’. Quinn's superficial view of the heroine leads him to the limiting moral position from which any clear view of the work as a whole is obscured. Edmund Wilson's evaluation, as it is taken from Patriotic Gore and quoted in Kenneth Eble's introduction, seems to me to reveal both Wilson's apparent frustration at being unable to categorize the novel and his almost intuitive grasp of what may be the most important factor in explaining the work's effectiveness.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1971

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References

1 Quinn, Arthur Hobson, American Fiction: An Historical and Critical Survey (New York, 1936). pp. 354–7.Google Scholar

2 Chopin, Kate, The Awakening, introduction by Kenneth Eble (New York: Capricorn Books, 1964), p. xiii.Google Scholar

3 Eble, Kenneth, ‘A Forgotten Novel: Kate Chopin's The Awakening’, Western Humanities Review, 10 (Summer 1956), 261–9.Google Scholar

4 Ziff, Larzer, The American 1890s; Life and Times of A Lost Generation (New York, 1966), pp. 297305.Google Scholar

6 Stark, Howard, ‘Kate Chopin's The Awakening: Manner and Matter’ (unpublished seminar paper, University of New Mexico).Google Scholar

7 Arms, George, ‘Kate Chopin's The Awakening In The Perspective of Her Literary Career’, Gohdes, Clarence (ed.), Essays On American Literature in Honor of Jay B. Hubbell (Durham: Duke University Press, 1967), p. 228.Google Scholar