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Kate Chopin

Kate Chopin (/ˈʃpæn/,[1][2] also US: /ʃˈpæn, ˈʃpən/;[3] born Katherine O'Flaherty; February 8, 1850[4] – August 22, 1904)[5] was an American author of short stories and novels based in Louisiana. She is considered by scholars[6] to have been a forerunner of American 20th-century feminist authors of Southern or Catholic background, such as Zelda Fitzgerald, and she is one of the more frequently read and recognized writers of Louisiana Creole heritage. She is best known today for her 1899 novel The Awakening.

Kate Chopin
Chopin in 1894
BornKatherine O'Flaherty
(1850-02-08)February 8, 1850
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
DiedAugust 22, 1904(1904-08-22) (aged 54)
St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.
OccupationNovelist, short story writer
GenreRealistic fiction
Notable worksThe Awakening
Spouse
  • Oscar Chopin
    (m. 1870; died 1882)
Children6
Signature

Of maternal French and paternal Irish descent, Chopin was born in St. Louis, Missouri. She married and moved with her husband to New Orleans. They later lived in the country in Cloutierville, Louisiana. From 1892 to 1895, Chopin wrote short stories for both children and adults that were published in national magazines, including Atlantic Monthly, Vogue, The Century Magazine, and The Youth's Companion. Her stories aroused controversy because of her subjects and her approach; they were condemned as immoral by some critics.

Her major works were two short story collections and two novels. The collections are Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897). Her important short stories included "Désirée's Baby" (1893), a tale of miscegenation in antebellum Louisiana,[7] "The Story of an Hour" (1894),[8] and "The Storm" (written 1898, first published 1969).[9][7] ("The Storm" is a sequel to "At the Cadian Ball (1892)," which appeared in Bayou Folk, her first collection of short stories.)[7]

Chopin also wrote two novels: At Fault (1890) and The Awakening (1899), which are set in New Orleans and Grand Isle, respectively. The characters in her stories are usually residents of Louisiana, and many are Creoles of various ethnic or racial backgrounds. Many of her works are set in Natchitoches in north-central Louisiana, a region where she lived.

Within a decade of her death, Chopin was widely recognized as one of the leading writers of her time.[10] In 1915, Fred Lewis Pattee wrote "some of [Chopin's] work is equal to the best that has been produced in France or even in America. [She displayed] what may be described as a native aptitude for narration amounting almost to genius."[10]

Life

 
Chopin and her children in New Orleans, 1877

Chopin was born Katherine O'Flaherty in St. Louis, Missouri. Her father, Thomas O’Flaherty, was a successful businessman who had immigrated to the United States from Galway, Ireland. Her mother, Eliza Faris, was his second wife, and a well-connected member of the ethnic French community in St. Louis as the daughter of Athénaïse Charleville, a Louisiana creole of French Canadian descent. Some of Chopin's ancestors were among the early European (French) inhabitants of Dauphin Island, Alabama.[11]

Kate was the third of five children, but her sisters died in infancy and her half-brothers (from her father's first marriage) died in their early 20s. They were reared Roman Catholic in the French and Irish traditions. She also became an avid reader of fairy tales, poetry, religious allegories, and classic and contemporary novels. She graduated from Sacred Heart Convent in St. Louis in 1868.[11]

At the age of five, she was sent to Sacred Heart Academy, where she learned how to handle her own money and make her own decisions, as the nuns intended. Upon her father's death, she was brought home to live with her grandmother and great-grandmother, comprising three generations of women who were widowed young and never remarried. For two years, she was tutored at home by her great-grandmother, Victoria (or Victoire) Charleville, who taught French, music, history, gossip and the need to look on life without fear.[12] After those two years, Kate went back to Sacred Heart Academy, which her best friend and neighbor, Kitty Garesche, also attended, and where her mentor, Mary O’Meara, taught. A gifted writer of both verse and prose, O'Meara guided her student to write regularly, to judge herself critically, and to conduct herself valiantly. Nine days after Kate and Kitty's first communions in May 1861, the Civil War came to St. Louis. During the war, Kate's half-brother died of fever, and her great-grandmother died as well. After the war ended, Kitty and her family were banished from St. Louis for supporting the Confederacy.[13]

In St. Louis, Missouri on June 8, 1870,[14] she married Oscar Chopin and settled with him in his home town of New Orleans. The Chopins had six children between 1871 and 1879: in order of birth, Jean Baptiste, Oscar Charles, George Francis, Frederick, Felix Andrew, and Lélia (baptized Marie Laïza).[15] In 1879, Oscar Chopin's cotton brokerage failed.

The family left the city and moved to Cloutierville in south Natchitoches Parish to manage several small plantations and a general store] They became active in the community, where Chopin found, in the local creole culture, much material for her future writing.

When Oscar Chopin died in 1882, he left Kate $42,000 in debt (approximately $1.18 million in 2023[16]). Emily Toth stated "for a while the widow Kate ran his [Oscar's] business and flirted outrageously with local men; (she even engaged in a relationship with a married farmer)."[17] Although Chopin worked to make her late husband's plantation and general store succeed, two years later she sold her Louisiana business.[17][18]

Her mother had implored her to move back to St. Louis, which Chopin did, with her mother's financial support. Her children gradually settled into life in the bustling city, but Chopin's mother died the following year.[18]

Chopin struggled with depression after the successive loss of her husband, her business, and her mother. Chopin's obstetrician and family friend Dr. Frederick Kolbenheyer suggested that she start writing, believing that it could be therapeutic for her. He understood that writing could be a focus for her extraordinary energy as well as a source of income.[19]

By the early 1890s, Chopin's short stories, articles, and translations were appearing in periodicals, including the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, and in various literary magazines. During a period of considerable publishing of folk tales, works in dialect, and other elements of Southern folk life, she was considered a regional writer who provided local color. Her literary qualities were overlooked.[20]

In 1899, The Awakening,her second novel, was published. Some newspaper critics reviewed the novel favorably.[21] However, the critical reception was largely negative. The critics considered the behavior of the novel's characters, especially the women – and Chopin's general treatment of female sexuality, motherhood, and marital infidelity – to be in conflict with prevailing standards of moral conduct and therefore offensive.[22]

This novel, her best-known work, is the story of a woman trapped within the confines of an oppressive society. Out of print for several decades, it was rediscovered in the 1970s, when there was a wave of new studies and appreciation of women's writings. The novel has been reprinted and now is widely available. It has been critically acclaimed for its writing quality and importance as an early feminist work of the South.[20]

Critics suggest that such works as The Awakening were scandalous and therefore not socially embraced. Chopin was discouraged by the lack of acceptance, but she continued to write, turning to the short story.[20] In 1900, she wrote "The Gentleman from New Orleans." That same year she was listed in the first edition of Marquis Who's Who. However, she never made much money from her writing, getting by on the investments she made locally in Louisiana and St. Louis of the inheritance from her mother's estate.[20]

 
Kate Chopin's grave in Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis, Missouri

While visiting the St. Louis World's Fair on August 20, 1904, Chopin suffered a brain hemorrhage. She died two days later, at the age of 54. She was interred in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis.[20]

Literary themes

Kate Chopin lived in a variety of locations, based on different economies and societies. These were sources of insights and observations from which she analyzed and expressed her ideas about late 19th-century Southern American society. She was brought up by women who were primarily ethnic French. Living in areas influenced by the Louisiana Creole and Cajun cultures after she joined her husband in Louisiana, she based many of her stories and sketches on her life in Louisiana. They expressed her unusual portrayals (for the time) of women as individuals with separate wants and needs.[18]

Chopin's writing style was influenced by her admiration of the contemporary French writer Guy de Maupassant, known for his short stories:

...I read his stories and marveled at them. Here was life, not fiction; for where were the plots, the old fashioned mechanism and stage trapping that in a vague, unthinkable way I had fancied were essential to the art of story making. Here was a man who had escaped from tradition and authority, who had entered into himself and looked out upon life through his own being and with his own eyes; and who, in a direct and simple way, told us what he saw...[23]

Kate Chopin is an example of a revisionist myth-maker because she revises myth more realistically about marriage and female sexuality of her time.[24] The biggest myth Chopin focused on was the "Victorian notion of women's somewhat anemic sexuality" and "The Storm" is the best example of Kate Chopin using that myth through a character set on fulfilling her complete sexual potential.[24] For instance, in "The Storm", portraits of women were revised by Kate Chopin to obtain consummation in roles other than marriage to evince a passionate nature considered inappropriate by conventional, patriarchal standards of Victorian America.[24]

Chopin went beyond Maupassant's technique and style to give her writing its own flavor. She had an ability to perceive life and creatively express it. She concentrated on women's lives and their continual struggles to create an identity of their own within the Southern society of the late nineteenth century. For instance, in "The Story of an Hour", Mrs. Mallard allows herself time to reflect after learning of her husband's death. Instead of dreading the lonely years ahead, she stumbles upon another realization:

She knew that she would weep again when she saw the kind, tender hands folded in death; the face that had never looked save with love upon her, fixed and gray and dead. But she saw beyond that bitter moment a long procession of years to come that would belong to her absolutely. And she opened and spread her arms out to them in welcome.[8]

Not many writers during the mid- to late 19th century were bold enough to address subjects that Chopin addressed. Elizabeth Fox-Genovese of Emory University wrote that "Kate was neither a feminist nor a suffragist, she said so. She was nonetheless a woman who took women extremely seriously. She never doubted women's ability to be strong."[25] Kate Chopin's sympathies lay with the individual in the context of his and her personal life and society.

Through her stories, Chopin wrote a kind of autobiography and described her societies; she had grown up in a time when her surroundings included the abolitionist movements before the American Civil War, and their influence on freedmen education and rights afterward, as well as the emergence of feminism. Her ideas and descriptions were not reporting, but her stories expressed the reality of her world.[18]

Chopin took strong interest in her surroundings and wrote about many of her observations. Jane Le Marquand assesses Chopin's writings as a new feminist voice, while other intellectuals recognize it as the voice of an individual who happens to be a woman. Marquand writes, "Chopin undermines patriarchy by endowing the Other, the woman, with an individual identity and a sense of self, a sense of self to which the letters she leaves behind give voice. The 'official' version of her life, that constructed by the men around her, is challenged and overthrown by the woman of the story."[23]

Chopin appeared to express her belief in the strength of women. Marquand draws from theories about creative nonfiction in terms of her work. In order for a story to be autobiographical, or even biographical, Marquand writes, there has to be a nonfictional element, but more often than not the author exaggerates the truth to spark and hold interest for the readers. Kate Chopin might have been surprised to know her work has been characterized as feminist in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, just as she had been in her own time to have it described as immoral. Critics tend to regard writers as individuals with larger points of view addressed to factions in society.[23]

Early works

Kate Chopin began her writing career with her first story published in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.[26][27] By the early 1890s, Chopin forged a successful writing career, contributing short stories and articles to local publications and literary journals. She also initially wrote a number of short stories such as "A Point at Issue!", "A No-Account Creole", "Beyond the Bayou" which were published in various magazines.[26][27] In 1890, her first novel "At Fault" about a young widow and the sexual constraints of women was published privately.[26][27] The protagonist demonstrates the initial theme of Kate Chopin's works when she began writing. In 1892, Kate Chopin produced "Désirée's Baby", "Ripe Figs" and "At the 'Cadian Ball" which appeared in Two Tales that year, and eight of her other stories were published.[26][27]

The short story "Désirée's Baby" focuses on Kate Chopin's experience with miscegenation and communities of the Creoles of color in Louisiana. She came of age when slavery was institutionalized in St. Louis and the South. In Louisiana, there had been communities established of free people of color, especially in New Orleans, where formal arrangements were made between white men and free women of color or enslaved women for plaçage, a kind of common-law marriage. There and in the country, she lived with a society based on the history of slavery and the continuation of plantation life, to a great extent. Mixed-race people (also known as mulattos) were numerous in New Orleans and the South. This story addresses the racism of 19th century America; persons who were visibly European-American could be threatened by the revelation of also having African ancestry. Chopin was not afraid to address such issues, which were often suppressed and intentionally ignored. Her character Armand tries to deny this reality, when he refuses to believe that he is of partial black descent, as it threatens his ideas about himself and his status in life. R. R. Foy believed that Chopin's story reached the level of great fiction, in which the only true subject is "human existence in its subtle, complex, true meaning, stripped of the view with which ethical and conventional standards have draped it".[28] The story can also be seen from a feminist perspective, where the white wife is unjustly made to suffer for having given birth to a partially black child.

"Desiree's Baby" was first published in an 1893 issue of Vogue, alongside "A Visit to Avoyelles", another of Kate Chopin's short stories, under the heading "Character Studies: The Father of Desiree's Baby – The Lover of Mentine." "A Visit to Avoyelles" typifies the local color writing that Chopin was known, and it is one of her stories that shows a couple in a completely fulfilled marriage. While Doudouce is hoping otherwise, he sees ample evidence that Mentine and Jules' marriage is a happy and fulfilling one despite the poverty-stricken circumstances that they live. In contrast, in "Desiree's Baby", which is much more controversial, due to the topic of miscegenation, portrays a marriage in trouble. The other contrasts to "A Visit to Avoyelles" are clear, but some are more subtle than others. Unlike Mentine and Jules, Armand and Desiree are rich and own slaves and a plantation. Mentine and Jules' marriage has weathered many hard times, while Armand and Desiree's falls apart at the first sign of trouble. Kate Chopin was talented at showing various sides of marriages and local people and their lives, making her writing very broad and sweeping in topic, even as she had many common themes in her work.[29][30]

Martha Cutter argues that Kate Chopin demonstrates feminine resistance to patriarchal society through her short stories.[31] Cutter claims that Chopin's resistance can be traced through the timeline of her work, with Chopin becoming more and more understanding of how women can fight back suppression as time progresses.[31] To demonstrate this, Cutter claims that Chopin's earlier stories, such as "At the 'Cadian Ball," "Wiser than a God," and "Mrs. Mobry's Reason" present women who are outright resisting, and are therefore not taken seriously, erased, or called insane. However, in Chopin's later stories, the female characters take on a different voice of resistance, one that is more "covert" and works to undermine patriarchal discourse from within. Cutter exemplifies this idea through the presentation of Chopin's works written after 1894.[31] Cutter claims that Chopin wanted to "disrupt patriarchal discourse, without being censored by it." And to do this, Chopin tried different strategies in her writings: silent women, overly resistant women, women with a "voice covert," and women who mimic patriarchal discourse.[31]

In 1893, she wrote "Madame Célestin's Divorce," and 13 of her stories were published. In 1894, "The Story of an Hour" and "A Respectable woman" were published by Vogue. Bayou Folk, a collection of 23 of Chopin's stories, was a success to Kate Chopin in 1894, published by Houghton Mifflin. It was the first of her works to gain national attention, and it was followed by A Night in Acadie (1897), another collection of short stories.

The Awakening

Published in 1899, her novel The Awakening is considered ahead of its time, garnering more negative reviews than positive from contemporary sources. Chopin was discouraged by this criticism, and she turned to writing short stories almost exclusively.[32] The female characters in The Awakening went beyond the standards of social norms of the time.[32][33][34] The protagonist has sexual desires and questions the sanctity of motherhood.[32][33][34]

The novel explores the theme of marital infidelity from the perspective of a wife. The book was widely banned, and it fell out of print for several decades, then was republished in the 1970s.[32] It now is considered a classic of feminist fiction.[32] Chopin reacted to the negative events happening to her by commenting ironically:

I never dreamt of Mrs. Pontellier making such a mess of things and working out her own damnation as she did. If I had had the slightest intimation of such a thing I would have excluded her from the company. But when I found out what she was up to, the play was half over and it was then too late.

According to Bender, Chopin was intrigued by Darwin's The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex.[33] Although she agreed with the processes of evolution, Chopin however quarreled with Darwin's theory of sexual selection and the female's role, which can be exemplified in The Awakening, in which Bender argues that Chopin references The Descent of Man.[33] In his essay, Darwin suggests female inferiority and says that males had "gained the power of selection." Bender argues that in her writing, Chopin presented women characters that had selective power based on their own sexual desires, not the want of reproduction or love.[33] Bender argues this idea through the examples of Edna Pontellier in The Awakening, Mrs. Baroda in "A Respectable Woman," and Mrs. Mallard in "The Story of an Hour."[33]

Martha Cutter's article "The Search for a Feminine Voice in the Works of Kate Chopin" analyzes the female characters in many of Chopin's stories. Cutter argues that Chopin's opinion of women as being "the invisible and unheard sex" is exemplified through the characterization of Edna in The Awakening. Cutter argues that Chopin's writing was shocking due to its sexual identity and articulation of feminine desire. According to Cutter, Chopin's stories disrupt patriarchal norms.[35] Today, The Awakening is said to be one of the five top favorite novels in literature courses all over America.[36]

Reception and legacy

Legacy

Kate Chopin has been credited by some as a pioneer of the early feminist movement despite not achieving any literary rewards for her works.[35][31]

Critical reception

Kate Chopin wrote the majority of her short stories and novels from 1889 to 1904. Altogether, Chopin wrote about 100 short stories or novels during her time as a fiction writer; her short stories were published in a number of local newspapers including the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.[37] A large number of her short stories were published in national magazines,such as Youth's Companion and Harper's Young People. Bayou Folk was well-reviewed, with Chopin's writing about how she had seen 100 press notices about it. Those stories were published in The New York Times and The Atlantic. People particularly liked how she used local dialects to give her characters a more authentic and relatable feel.[37] She also published two novels: At Fault and The Awakening. Her novels were not well-received initially, compared to her short stories. Her 1899 novel The Awakening was considered to be immoral due to the overt themes of female sexuality, as well as the female protagonist's constantly rebuking gender roles and norms. There have been rumors that the novel originally was banned, which have been disproved.[38] Local and national newspapers published mixed reviews of Chopin's novel with one calling it "poison" and "unpleasant", going on to say it was "too strong a drink for moral babes",[39] while another newspaper published a review calling the novel, "A St. Louis Woman Who Has Turned Fame Into Literature."[40] The majority of the early reviews for The Awakening were largely negative. Emily Toth, one of Chopin's most well known biographers, thought she had gone too far with this novel. She argued that the protagonist Edna's blatant sensuality was too much for the male gatekeepers. So much so that publication of her next novel was cancelled.

The poet Orrick Johns was at least one strong advocate of Chopin and The Awakening. "An influential modernist poet and progressive journalist originally from St. Louis who was popular in Greenwich Village literary circles,"[41] in 1911 he wrote in Reedy's Mirror: “To one who has read her as a boy and come back to her again with powers of appreciation more subtly developed, she breathes the magic of a whole chapter in his life.”[41] "...[C]redible evidence exists that Johns shared his positive views of Chopin with his literary peers, a tight-knit group that included feminist writers Susan Glaspell and Edith Summers Kelley..."[42] Through Johns's personal friendship with Kelley and his fierce advocacy for The Awakening, it has been argued[42] that Kelley read and was influenced by The Awakening, a book once thought of as a literary dead end in terms of influence on the next generation of feminist writers. Textual comparisons between specific texts in Kelly's Weeds and The Awakening point toward an argument for its wider influence.

Nevertheless, it wasn't until Per Seyersted, a Norwegian professor and scholar, rediscovered Chopin almost 70 years later that the general public began to really appreciate her work as essential feminist and Southern literature from the 19th century. Seyersted wrote that she "broke new ground in American Literature." According to Emily Toth, Kate Chopin's work rose in popularity and recognition during the 1970s due to themes of women venturing outside of the constraints set upon them by society, which appealed to people participating in feminist activism and the sexual revolution. She also argues that the works appealed to women in the 1960s, "a time when American women yearned to know about our feisty foremothers"."[40] Academics and scholars began to put Chopin in the same feminist categories as Louisa May Alcott, Susan Warner, and Emily Dickinson. Parallels between Alcott and Chopin have been drawn to point out how both authors wrote about women who departed from their traditional roles by dreaming of or striving for independence and individual freedoms, also described as a dramatization of a woman's struggle for selfhood.[43] A reviewer for Choice Reviews stated that it was ultimately a struggle doomed to failure because the patriarchal conventions of her society restricted her freedom.[44] Karen Simons felt that this failed struggle was perfectly captured by the ending of the novel, where Edna Pontellier ends her life due to her realization that she cannot truly be both the traditional mother and have a sense of herself as an individual at the same time.[45]

Representation in other media

Louisiana Public Broadcasting, under president Beth Courtney, produced Kate Chopin: A Reawakening, a documentary on Chopin's life.[46]

In the penultimate episode of the first season of HBO's Treme, set in New Orleans, the teacher Creighton (played by John Goodman) assigns Kate Chopin's The Awakening to his freshmen and warns them:

I want you to take your time with it," he cautions. "Pay attention to the language itself. The ideas. Don't think in terms of a beginning and an end. Because unlike some plot-driven entertainments, there is no closure in real life. Not really.[47]

Works

 
Kate Chopin
  • "Bayou Folk" Read "Bayou Folk"
  • "A Night in Acadie" Read "A Night in Acadie"
  • "At the Cadian Ball" (1892) Read "At the Cadian Ball"
  • "The Story of an Hour" (1894) Read "The Story of an Hour"
  • "Désirée's Baby" (1895) Read "Désirée's Baby"
  • "Emancipation: A Life Fable" Read "Emancipation: A Life Fable"
  • "The Storm" (1898) Read "The Storm"
  • "A Pair of Silk Stockings" Read "A Pair of Silk Stockings"
  • "The Locket"
  • "Athenaise" Read "Athenaise"
  • "Lilacs" Read "Lilacs"
  • "A Respectable Woman" Read "A Respectable Woman"
  • "The Unexpected" Read "The Unexpected"
  • "The Kiss" Read "The Kiss"
  • "Beyond the Bayou" Read "Beyond the Bayou"
  • "An No-Account Creole" Read "An No-Account Creole"
  • The Awakening, and Selected Short Stories
  • "Fedora"
  • "Regret" Read "Regret
  • "Madame Célestin's Divorce" Read "Madame Célestin's Divorce"
  • At Fault (1890), Nixon Jones Printing Co, St. Louis Read "At Fault"
  • The Awakening (1899), H.S. Stone, Chicago Read "The Awakening"
  • "An Egyptian Cigarette" (1900)

Honors and awards

  • Her home with Oscar Chopin in Cloutierville was built by Alexis Cloutier in the early part of the 19th century. In the late 20th century, the house was designated as the Kate Chopin House, a National Historic Landmark (NHL), because of her literary significance. The house was adapted for use as the Bayou Folk Museum. On October 1, 2008, the house was destroyed by a fire, with little left but the chimney.[48]
  • In 1990, Chopin was honored with a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[49]
  • In 2012, she was commemorated with an iron bust of her head at the Writer's Corner in the Central West End neighborhood of St. Louis, across the street from Left Bank Books.[50]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ . Lexico UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on May 16, 2021.
  2. ^ "Chopin". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  3. ^ "Chopin". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
  4. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions about Kate Chopin". KateChopin.org.
  5. ^ Barton, Gay (1999). "Chopin, Kate O'Flaherty". American National Biography (online ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/anb/9780198606697.article.1600295. (subscription required)
  6. ^ Nilsen, Helge Normann. "American Women's Literature in the Twentieth Century: A Survey of Some Feminist Trends," American Studies in Scandinavia, Vol. 22, 1990, pp. 27-29; University of Trondheim
  7. ^ a b c William L. (Ed.) Andrews, Hobson, Trudier Harris, Minrose C. Gwwin (1997). The Literature of the American South: A Norton Anthology. Norton, W. W. & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-31671-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ a b Chopin, Kate. The Story of an Hour.
  9. ^ The Editors of KateChopin.org. "The Storm, Kate Chopin, characters, setting, questions". KateChopin.org. The Kate Chopin International Society. Retrieved January 28, 2023. {{cite web}}: |last1= has generic name (help)
  10. ^ a b Fred Lewis Pattee. A History of American Literature Since 1870. Harvard University Press. p. 364.
  11. ^ a b Literary St. Louis: Noted Authors and St. Louis Landmarks Associated With Them. Associates of St. Louis University Libraries, Inc. and Landmarks Associate of St. Louis, Inc. 1969.
  12. ^ Beer, Janet (2008). The Cambridge Companion To Kate Chopin. Cambridge University Press. pp. 13–26. ISBN 9781139001984.
  13. ^ Toth and Seyersted, Emily and Per (1998). Kate Chopin's Private Papers. Indiana University Press. pp. 1–2. ISBN 978-0253331120.
  14. ^ Marriage certificate between Oscar Chopin and Katie O'Flaherty accessed on ancestry.com on October 19, 2015
  15. ^ "Biography |". www.katechopin.org. Retrieved December 11, 2015.
  16. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved April 16, 2022.
  17. ^ a b Toth, Emily (1990). "Reviews the essay "The Shadows of the First Biographer: The Case of Kate Chopin"". Southern Review (26).
  18. ^ a b c d "Short Story Criticism 'An Introduction to Kate Chopin 1851-1904'". Short Story Criticism. 116. 2008.
  19. ^ Seyersted, Per (1985). Kate Chopin: A Critical Biography. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State UP. ISBN 978-0-8071-0678-5.
  20. ^ a b c d e O'Flaherty (1984). "Kate Chopin, An Introduction to (1851-1904)". Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism. 14.
  21. ^ Toth, Emily (1990). Kate Chopin. William Morrow & Company, Inc. ISBN 9780688097073.
  22. ^ Walker, Nancy (2001). Kate Chopin: A Literary Life. Palgrave Publishers.
  23. ^ a b c Le Marquand, Jane. "Kate Chopin as Feminist: Subverting the French Androcentric Influence". Deep South 2 (1996)
  24. ^ a b c Shurbutt, Sylvia Bailey. "The Can River Characters and Revisionist Mythmaking in the Work of Kate Chopin". The Southern Literary. 68: 14–23.
  25. ^ Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening. "Interview: Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, Emory University". March 14, 2008
  26. ^ a b c d Larrabee, Denise. "Chopin, Kate 1850-1904". American Writers, Retrospective Supplement 2.
  27. ^ a b c d "Kate Chopin Biography".
  28. ^ Foy, R.R. (1991). "Chopin's Desiree's Baby". Explicatory. No. 49. pp. 222–224.
  29. ^ Gibert, Teresa "Textual, Contextual and Critical Surprises in 'Desiree's Baby'" Connotations: A Journal for Critical Debate. vol. 14.1-3. 2004/2005. pg. 38-67
  30. ^ Chopin, Kate "A Visit to Avoyelles" Bayou Folk 1893 pg. 223-229
  31. ^ a b c d e Cutter, Martha. "Losing the Battle but Winning the War: Resistance to Patriarchal Discourse in Kate Chopin's Short Fiction". Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers. 68.
  32. ^ a b c d e Susan, Green. "An overview of The Awakening". Literature Resource Center.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Bender, Bert (September 1991). "The Teeth of Desire: The Awakening and The Descent of Man". American Literature. 63 (3): 459–473. doi:10.2307/2927243. JSTOR 2927243.
  34. ^ a b Mou, Xianfeng. "Kate Chopin's Narrative Techniques and Separate Space in The Awakening". The Southern Literary Journal.
  35. ^ a b Cutter, Martha. "The Search for a Feminine Voice in the Works of Kate Chopin". Unruly Tongue: Identity and Voice in American Women's Writing. 127: 87–109.
  36. ^ America Literature. United States of America: McDougal Littell. 2008. p. 758. ISBN 978-0-618-56866-6.
  37. ^ a b "XII. THE AWAKENING", Kate Chopin and Her Creole Stories, University of Pennsylvania Press, January 31, 1932, doi:10.9783/9781512805659-015, ISBN 9781512805659
  38. ^ Kessler, Carol Farley; Toth, Emily (December 1991). "Kate Chopin: A Life of the Author of The Awakening". American Literature. 63 (4): 755. doi:10.2307/2926892. ISSN 0002-9831. JSTOR 2926892.
  39. ^ Franklin, Benjamin (2010). Research guide to American literature. Facts On File. ISBN 9780816078615. OCLC 699681835.
  40. ^ a b Toth, Emily (July 1999). "Emily Toth Thanks Kate Chopin". The Women's Review of Books. 16 (10/11): 34. doi:10.2307/4023250. ISSN 0738-1433. JSTOR 4023250.
  41. ^ a b Ostman, Heather; O’Donoghue, Kate (2015), Ostman, Heather; O’Donoghue, Kate (eds.), "Introduction: Kate Chopin in Context: New Approaches", Kate Chopin in Context: New Approaches, American Literature Readings in the Twenty-First Century, New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, pp. 1–11, doi:10.1057/9781137543967_1, ISBN 978-1-137-54396-7, retrieved January 19, 2022
  42. ^ a b Kornasky, Linda (2011). ""Discovery of a Treasury": Orrick Johns and the Influence of Kate Chopin's The Awakening on Edith Summers Kelley's Weeds". Studies in American Naturalism. 6 (2): 197–215. doi:10.1353/san.2011.0025. ISSN 1944-6519. S2CID 145614976.
  43. ^ Winn, Harbour (1992). "Echoes of Literary Sisterhood: Louisa May Alcott and Kate Chopin". Studies in American Fiction. 20 (2): 205–208. doi:10.1353/saf.1992.0000. ISSN 2158-415X. S2CID 162207140.
  44. ^ The awakening: a novel of beginnings. March 1, 1994.
  45. ^ Simons, Karen (Spring 1998). "Kate Chopin on the Nature of Things" (PDF). The Mississippi Quarterly. 51.2: p243.
  46. ^ "Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening - About the Program". www.pbs.org. Retrieved March 19, 2018.
  47. ^ "Treme - as a season ends, so does a life", The Atlantic, June 2010, accessed 25 June 2014
  48. ^ Welborn, Vickie (October 1, 1888). "Loss of Kate Chopin House to fire 'devastating'". The Town Talk.[permanent dead link]
  49. ^ St. Louis Walk of Fame. . stlouiswalkoffame.org. Archived from the original on October 31, 2012. Retrieved April 25, 2013.
  50. ^ "Kate Chopin Bust Unveiled". West End Word. Retrieved January 8, 2014.

Further reading

  • "Kate O'Flaherty Chopin" (1988) A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, Vol. I, p. 176
  • Koloski, Bernard (2009) Awakenings: The Story of the Kate Chopin Revival. Louisiana State University Press, Baton Rouge, LA. ISBN 978-0-8071-3495-5
  • Eliot, Lorraine Nye (2002) The Real Kate Chopin, Dorrance Publishing Co., Pittsburgh, PA. ISBN 0-8059-5786-3
  • Berkove, Lawrence I (2000) "Fatal Self-Assertion in Kate Chopin's 'The Story of an Hour'." American Literary Realism 32.2, pp. 152–158.
  • Toth, Emily (1999) Unveiling Kate Chopin. University Press of Mississippi, Jackson, MS. ISBN 1-57806-101-6

External links

  • Works by Kate Chopin in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by or about Kate Chopin at Internet Archive
  • Works by Kate Chopin at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Kate Chopin, Novelist And Short Story Writer
  • Kate Chopin at American Literature
  • Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening, PBS documentary

kate, chopin, also, born, katherine, flaherty, february, 1850, august, 1904, american, author, short, stories, novels, based, louisiana, considered, scholars, have, been, forerunner, american, 20th, century, feminist, authors, southern, catholic, background, s. Kate Chopin ˈ ʃ oʊ p ae n 1 2 also US ʃ oʊ ˈ p ae n ˈ ʃ oʊ p en 3 born Katherine O Flaherty February 8 1850 4 August 22 1904 5 was an American author of short stories and novels based in Louisiana She is considered by scholars 6 to have been a forerunner of American 20th century feminist authors of Southern or Catholic background such as Zelda Fitzgerald and she is one of the more frequently read and recognized writers of Louisiana Creole heritage She is best known today for her 1899 novel The Awakening Kate ChopinChopin in 1894BornKatherine O Flaherty 1850 02 08 February 8 1850St Louis Missouri U S DiedAugust 22 1904 1904 08 22 aged 54 St Louis Missouri U S OccupationNovelist short story writerGenreRealistic fictionNotable worksThe AwakeningSpouseOscar Chopin m 1870 died 1882 wbr Children6SignatureOf maternal French and paternal Irish descent Chopin was born in St Louis Missouri She married and moved with her husband to New Orleans They later lived in the country in Cloutierville Louisiana From 1892 to 1895 Chopin wrote short stories for both children and adults that were published in national magazines including Atlantic Monthly Vogue The Century Magazine and The Youth s Companion Her stories aroused controversy because of her subjects and her approach they were condemned as immoral by some critics Her major works were two short story collections and two novels The collections are Bayou Folk 1894 and A Night in Acadie 1897 Her important short stories included Desiree s Baby 1893 a tale of miscegenation in antebellum Louisiana 7 The Story of an Hour 1894 8 and The Storm written 1898 first published 1969 9 7 The Storm is a sequel to At the Cadian Ball 1892 which appeared in Bayou Folk her first collection of short stories 7 Chopin also wrote two novels At Fault 1890 and The Awakening 1899 which are set in New Orleans and Grand Isle respectively The characters in her stories are usually residents of Louisiana and many are Creoles of various ethnic or racial backgrounds Many of her works are set in Natchitoches in north central Louisiana a region where she lived Within a decade of her death Chopin was widely recognized as one of the leading writers of her time 10 In 1915 Fred Lewis Pattee wrote some of Chopin s work is equal to the best that has been produced in France or even in America She displayed what may be described as a native aptitude for narration amounting almost to genius 10 Contents 1 Life 2 Literary themes 2 1 Early works 2 2 The Awakening 3 Reception and legacy 3 1 Legacy 3 2 Critical reception 4 Representation in other media 5 Works 6 Honors and awards 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Further reading 10 External linksLife Edit Chopin and her children in New Orleans 1877 Chopin was born Katherine O Flaherty in St Louis Missouri Her father Thomas O Flaherty was a successful businessman who had immigrated to the United States from Galway Ireland Her mother Eliza Faris was his second wife and a well connected member of the ethnic French community in St Louis as the daughter of Athenaise Charleville a Louisiana creole of French Canadian descent Some of Chopin s ancestors were among the early European French inhabitants of Dauphin Island Alabama 11 Kate was the third of five children but her sisters died in infancy and her half brothers from her father s first marriage died in their early 20s They were reared Roman Catholic in the French and Irish traditions She also became an avid reader of fairy tales poetry religious allegories and classic and contemporary novels She graduated from Sacred Heart Convent in St Louis in 1868 11 At the age of five she was sent to Sacred Heart Academy where she learned how to handle her own money and make her own decisions as the nuns intended Upon her father s death she was brought home to live with her grandmother and great grandmother comprising three generations of women who were widowed young and never remarried For two years she was tutored at home by her great grandmother Victoria or Victoire Charleville who taught French music history gossip and the need to look on life without fear 12 After those two years Kate went back to Sacred Heart Academy which her best friend and neighbor Kitty Garesche also attended and where her mentor Mary O Meara taught A gifted writer of both verse and prose O Meara guided her student to write regularly to judge herself critically and to conduct herself valiantly Nine days after Kate and Kitty s first communions in May 1861 the Civil War came to St Louis During the war Kate s half brother died of fever and her great grandmother died as well After the war ended Kitty and her family were banished from St Louis for supporting the Confederacy 13 Chopin house in Cloutierville In St Louis Missouri on June 8 1870 14 she married Oscar Chopin and settled with him in his home town of New Orleans The Chopins had six children between 1871 and 1879 in order of birth Jean Baptiste Oscar Charles George Francis Frederick Felix Andrew and Lelia baptized Marie Laiza 15 In 1879 Oscar Chopin s cotton brokerage failed The family left the city and moved to Cloutierville in south Natchitoches Parish to manage several small plantations and a general store They became active in the community where Chopin found in the local creole culture much material for her future writing When Oscar Chopin died in 1882 he left Kate 42 000 in debt approximately 1 18 million in 2023 16 Emily Toth stated for a while the widow Kate ran his Oscar s business and flirted outrageously with local men she even engaged in a relationship with a married farmer 17 Although Chopin worked to make her late husband s plantation and general store succeed two years later she sold her Louisiana business 17 18 Her mother had implored her to move back to St Louis which Chopin did with her mother s financial support Her children gradually settled into life in the bustling city but Chopin s mother died the following year 18 Chopin struggled with depression after the successive loss of her husband her business and her mother Chopin s obstetrician and family friend Dr Frederick Kolbenheyer suggested that she start writing believing that it could be therapeutic for her He understood that writing could be a focus for her extraordinary energy as well as a source of income 19 By the early 1890s Chopin s short stories articles and translations were appearing in periodicals including the St Louis Post Dispatch and in various literary magazines During a period of considerable publishing of folk tales works in dialect and other elements of Southern folk life she was considered a regional writer who provided local color Her literary qualities were overlooked 20 In 1899 The Awakening her second novel was published Some newspaper critics reviewed the novel favorably 21 However the critical reception was largely negative The critics considered the behavior of the novel s characters especially the women and Chopin s general treatment of female sexuality motherhood and marital infidelity to be in conflict with prevailing standards of moral conduct and therefore offensive 22 This novel her best known work is the story of a woman trapped within the confines of an oppressive society Out of print for several decades it was rediscovered in the 1970s when there was a wave of new studies and appreciation of women s writings The novel has been reprinted and now is widely available It has been critically acclaimed for its writing quality and importance as an early feminist work of the South 20 Critics suggest that such works as The Awakening were scandalous and therefore not socially embraced Chopin was discouraged by the lack of acceptance but she continued to write turning to the short story 20 In 1900 she wrote The Gentleman from New Orleans That same year she was listed in the first edition of Marquis Who s Who However she never made much money from her writing getting by on the investments she made locally in Louisiana and St Louis of the inheritance from her mother s estate 20 Kate Chopin s grave in Calvary Cemetery St Louis Missouri While visiting the St Louis World s Fair on August 20 1904 Chopin suffered a brain hemorrhage She died two days later at the age of 54 She was interred in Calvary Cemetery in St Louis 20 Literary themes EditKate Chopin lived in a variety of locations based on different economies and societies These were sources of insights and observations from which she analyzed and expressed her ideas about late 19th century Southern American society She was brought up by women who were primarily ethnic French Living in areas influenced by the Louisiana Creole and Cajun cultures after she joined her husband in Louisiana she based many of her stories and sketches on her life in Louisiana They expressed her unusual portrayals for the time of women as individuals with separate wants and needs 18 Chopin s writing style was influenced by her admiration of the contemporary French writer Guy de Maupassant known for his short stories I read his stories and marveled at them Here was life not fiction for where were the plots the old fashioned mechanism and stage trapping that in a vague unthinkable way I had fancied were essential to the art of story making Here was a man who had escaped from tradition and authority who had entered into himself and looked out upon life through his own being and with his own eyes and who in a direct and simple way told us what he saw 23 Kate Chopin is an example of a revisionist myth maker because she revises myth more realistically about marriage and female sexuality of her time 24 The biggest myth Chopin focused on was the Victorian notion of women s somewhat anemic sexuality and The Storm is the best example of Kate Chopin using that myth through a character set on fulfilling her complete sexual potential 24 For instance in The Storm portraits of women were revised by Kate Chopin to obtain consummation in roles other than marriage to evince a passionate nature considered inappropriate by conventional patriarchal standards of Victorian America 24 Chopin went beyond Maupassant s technique and style to give her writing its own flavor She had an ability to perceive life and creatively express it She concentrated on women s lives and their continual struggles to create an identity of their own within the Southern society of the late nineteenth century For instance in The Story of an Hour Mrs Mallard allows herself time to reflect after learning of her husband s death Instead of dreading the lonely years ahead she stumbles upon another realization She knew that she would weep again when she saw the kind tender hands folded in death the face that had never looked save with love upon her fixed and gray and dead But she saw beyond that bitter moment a long procession of years to come that would belong to her absolutely And she opened and spread her arms out to them in welcome 8 Not many writers during the mid to late 19th century were bold enough to address subjects that Chopin addressed Elizabeth Fox Genovese of Emory University wrote that Kate was neither a feminist nor a suffragist she said so She was nonetheless a woman who took women extremely seriously She never doubted women s ability to be strong 25 Kate Chopin s sympathies lay with the individual in the context of his and her personal life and society Through her stories Chopin wrote a kind of autobiography and described her societies she had grown up in a time when her surroundings included the abolitionist movements before the American Civil War and their influence on freedmen education and rights afterward as well as the emergence of feminism Her ideas and descriptions were not reporting but her stories expressed the reality of her world 18 Chopin took strong interest in her surroundings and wrote about many of her observations Jane Le Marquand assesses Chopin s writings as a new feminist voice while other intellectuals recognize it as the voice of an individual who happens to be a woman Marquand writes Chopin undermines patriarchy by endowing the Other the woman with an individual identity and a sense of self a sense of self to which the letters she leaves behind give voice The official version of her life that constructed by the men around her is challenged and overthrown by the woman of the story 23 Chopin appeared to express her belief in the strength of women Marquand draws from theories about creative nonfiction in terms of her work In order for a story to be autobiographical or even biographical Marquand writes there has to be a nonfictional element but more often than not the author exaggerates the truth to spark and hold interest for the readers Kate Chopin might have been surprised to know her work has been characterized as feminist in the late 20th and early 21st centuries just as she had been in her own time to have it described as immoral Critics tend to regard writers as individuals with larger points of view addressed to factions in society 23 Early works Edit Kate Chopin began her writing career with her first story published in the St Louis Post Dispatch 26 27 By the early 1890s Chopin forged a successful writing career contributing short stories and articles to local publications and literary journals She also initially wrote a number of short stories such as A Point at Issue A No Account Creole Beyond the Bayou which were published in various magazines 26 27 In 1890 her first novel At Fault about a young widow and the sexual constraints of women was published privately 26 27 The protagonist demonstrates the initial theme of Kate Chopin s works when she began writing In 1892 Kate Chopin produced Desiree s Baby Ripe Figs and At the Cadian Ball which appeared in Two Tales that year and eight of her other stories were published 26 27 The short story Desiree s Baby focuses on Kate Chopin s experience with miscegenation and communities of the Creoles of color in Louisiana She came of age when slavery was institutionalized in St Louis and the South In Louisiana there had been communities established of free people of color especially in New Orleans where formal arrangements were made between white men and free women of color or enslaved women for placage a kind of common law marriage There and in the country she lived with a society based on the history of slavery and the continuation of plantation life to a great extent Mixed race people also known as mulattos were numerous in New Orleans and the South This story addresses the racism of 19th century America persons who were visibly European American could be threatened by the revelation of also having African ancestry Chopin was not afraid to address such issues which were often suppressed and intentionally ignored Her character Armand tries to deny this reality when he refuses to believe that he is of partial black descent as it threatens his ideas about himself and his status in life R R Foy believed that Chopin s story reached the level of great fiction in which the only true subject is human existence in its subtle complex true meaning stripped of the view with which ethical and conventional standards have draped it 28 The story can also be seen from a feminist perspective where the white wife is unjustly made to suffer for having given birth to a partially black child Desiree s Baby was first published in an 1893 issue of Vogue alongside A Visit to Avoyelles another of Kate Chopin s short stories under the heading Character Studies The Father of Desiree s Baby The Lover of Mentine A Visit to Avoyelles typifies the local color writing that Chopin was known and it is one of her stories that shows a couple in a completely fulfilled marriage While Doudouce is hoping otherwise he sees ample evidence that Mentine and Jules marriage is a happy and fulfilling one despite the poverty stricken circumstances that they live In contrast in Desiree s Baby which is much more controversial due to the topic of miscegenation portrays a marriage in trouble The other contrasts to A Visit to Avoyelles are clear but some are more subtle than others Unlike Mentine and Jules Armand and Desiree are rich and own slaves and a plantation Mentine and Jules marriage has weathered many hard times while Armand and Desiree s falls apart at the first sign of trouble Kate Chopin was talented at showing various sides of marriages and local people and their lives making her writing very broad and sweeping in topic even as she had many common themes in her work 29 30 Martha Cutter argues that Kate Chopin demonstrates feminine resistance to patriarchal society through her short stories 31 Cutter claims that Chopin s resistance can be traced through the timeline of her work with Chopin becoming more and more understanding of how women can fight back suppression as time progresses 31 To demonstrate this Cutter claims that Chopin s earlier stories such as At the Cadian Ball Wiser than a God and Mrs Mobry s Reason present women who are outright resisting and are therefore not taken seriously erased or called insane However in Chopin s later stories the female characters take on a different voice of resistance one that is more covert and works to undermine patriarchal discourse from within Cutter exemplifies this idea through the presentation of Chopin s works written after 1894 31 Cutter claims that Chopin wanted to disrupt patriarchal discourse without being censored by it And to do this Chopin tried different strategies in her writings silent women overly resistant women women with a voice covert and women who mimic patriarchal discourse 31 In 1893 she wrote Madame Celestin s Divorce and 13 of her stories were published In 1894 The Story of an Hour and A Respectable woman were published by Vogue Bayou Folk a collection of 23 of Chopin s stories was a success to Kate Chopin in 1894 published by Houghton Mifflin It was the first of her works to gain national attention and it was followed by A Night in Acadie 1897 another collection of short stories The Awakening Edit Main article The Awakening Chopin novel Published in 1899 her novel The Awakening is considered ahead of its time garnering more negative reviews than positive from contemporary sources Chopin was discouraged by this criticism and she turned to writing short stories almost exclusively 32 The female characters in The Awakening went beyond the standards of social norms of the time 32 33 34 The protagonist has sexual desires and questions the sanctity of motherhood 32 33 34 The novel explores the theme of marital infidelity from the perspective of a wife The book was widely banned and it fell out of print for several decades then was republished in the 1970s 32 It now is considered a classic of feminist fiction 32 Chopin reacted to the negative events happening to her by commenting ironically I never dreamt of Mrs Pontellier making such a mess of things and working out her own damnation as she did If I had had the slightest intimation of such a thing I would have excluded her from the company But when I found out what she was up to the play was half over and it was then too late According to Bender Chopin was intrigued by Darwin s The Descent of Man and Selection in Relation to Sex 33 Although she agreed with the processes of evolution Chopin however quarreled with Darwin s theory of sexual selection and the female s role which can be exemplified in The Awakening in which Bender argues that Chopin references The Descent of Man 33 In his essay Darwin suggests female inferiority and says that males had gained the power of selection Bender argues that in her writing Chopin presented women characters that had selective power based on their own sexual desires not the want of reproduction or love 33 Bender argues this idea through the examples of Edna Pontellier in The Awakening Mrs Baroda in A Respectable Woman and Mrs Mallard in The Story of an Hour 33 Martha Cutter s article The Search for a Feminine Voice in the Works of Kate Chopin analyzes the female characters in many of Chopin s stories Cutter argues that Chopin s opinion of women as being the invisible and unheard sex is exemplified through the characterization of Edna in The Awakening Cutter argues that Chopin s writing was shocking due to its sexual identity and articulation of feminine desire According to Cutter Chopin s stories disrupt patriarchal norms 35 Today The Awakening is said to be one of the five top favorite novels in literature courses all over America 36 Reception and legacy EditLegacy Edit Kate Chopin has been credited by some as a pioneer of the early feminist movement despite not achieving any literary rewards for her works 35 31 Critical reception Edit Kate Chopin wrote the majority of her short stories and novels from 1889 to 1904 Altogether Chopin wrote about 100 short stories or novels during her time as a fiction writer her short stories were published in a number of local newspapers including the St Louis Post Dispatch 37 A large number of her short stories were published in national magazines such as Youth s Companion and Harper s Young People Bayou Folk was well reviewed with Chopin s writing about how she had seen 100 press notices about it Those stories were published in The New York Times and The Atlantic People particularly liked how she used local dialects to give her characters a more authentic and relatable feel 37 She also published two novels At Fault and The Awakening Her novels were not well received initially compared to her short stories Her 1899 novel The Awakening was considered to be immoral due to the overt themes of female sexuality as well as the female protagonist s constantly rebuking gender roles and norms There have been rumors that the novel originally was banned which have been disproved 38 Local and national newspapers published mixed reviews of Chopin s novel with one calling it poison and unpleasant going on to say it was too strong a drink for moral babes 39 while another newspaper published a review calling the novel A St Louis Woman Who Has Turned Fame Into Literature 40 The majority of the early reviews for The Awakening were largely negative Emily Toth one of Chopin s most well known biographers thought she had gone too far with this novel She argued that the protagonist Edna s blatant sensuality was too much for the male gatekeepers So much so that publication of her next novel was cancelled The poet Orrick Johns was at least one strong advocate of Chopin and The Awakening An influential modernist poet and progressive journalist originally from St Louis who was popular in Greenwich Village literary circles 41 in 1911 he wrote in Reedy s Mirror To one who has read her as a boy and come back to her again with powers of appreciation more subtly developed she breathes the magic of a whole chapter in his life 41 C redible evidence exists that Johns shared his positive views of Chopin with his literary peers a tight knit group that included feminist writers Susan Glaspell and Edith Summers Kelley 42 Through Johns s personal friendship with Kelley and his fierce advocacy for The Awakening it has been argued 42 that Kelley read and was influenced by The Awakening a book once thought of as a literary dead end in terms of influence on the next generation of feminist writers Textual comparisons between specific texts in Kelly s Weeds and The Awakening point toward an argument for its wider influence Nevertheless it wasn t until Per Seyersted a Norwegian professor and scholar rediscovered Chopin almost 70 years later that the general public began to really appreciate her work as essential feminist and Southern literature from the 19th century Seyersted wrote that she broke new ground in American Literature According to Emily Toth Kate Chopin s work rose in popularity and recognition during the 1970s due to themes of women venturing outside of the constraints set upon them by society which appealed to people participating in feminist activism and the sexual revolution She also argues that the works appealed to women in the 1960s a time when American women yearned to know about our feisty foremothers 40 Academics and scholars began to put Chopin in the same feminist categories as Louisa May Alcott Susan Warner and Emily Dickinson Parallels between Alcott and Chopin have been drawn to point out how both authors wrote about women who departed from their traditional roles by dreaming of or striving for independence and individual freedoms also described as a dramatization of a woman s struggle for selfhood 43 A reviewer for Choice Reviews stated that it was ultimately a struggle doomed to failure because the patriarchal conventions of her society restricted her freedom 44 Karen Simons felt that this failed struggle was perfectly captured by the ending of the novel where Edna Pontellier ends her life due to her realization that she cannot truly be both the traditional mother and have a sense of herself as an individual at the same time 45 Representation in other media EditLouisiana Public Broadcasting under president Beth Courtney produced Kate Chopin A Reawakening a documentary on Chopin s life 46 In the penultimate episode of the first season of HBO s Treme set in New Orleans the teacher Creighton played by John Goodman assigns Kate Chopin s The Awakening to his freshmen and warns them I want you to take your time with it he cautions Pay attention to the language itself The ideas Don t think in terms of a beginning and an end Because unlike some plot driven entertainments there is no closure in real life Not really 47 Works Edit Kate Chopin Bayou Folk Read Bayou Folk A Night in Acadie Read A Night in Acadie At the Cadian Ball 1892 Read At the Cadian Ball The Story of an Hour 1894 Read The Story of an Hour Desiree s Baby 1895 Read Desiree s Baby Emancipation A Life Fable Read Emancipation A Life Fable The Storm 1898 Read The Storm A Pair of Silk Stockings Read A Pair of Silk Stockings The Locket Athenaise Read Athenaise Lilacs Read Lilacs A Respectable Woman Read A Respectable Woman The Unexpected Read The Unexpected The Kiss Read The Kiss Beyond the Bayou Read Beyond the Bayou An No Account Creole Read An No Account Creole The Awakening and Selected Short Stories Fedora Regret Read Regret Madame Celestin s Divorce Read Madame Celestin s Divorce At Fault 1890 Nixon Jones Printing Co St Louis Read At Fault The Awakening 1899 H S Stone Chicago Read The Awakening An Egyptian Cigarette 1900 Honors and awards EditHer home with Oscar Chopin in Cloutierville was built by Alexis Cloutier in the early part of the 19th century In the late 20th century the house was designated as the Kate Chopin House a National Historic Landmark NHL because of her literary significance The house was adapted for use as the Bayou Folk Museum On October 1 2008 the house was destroyed by a fire with little left but the chimney 48 In 1990 Chopin was honored with a star on the St Louis Walk of Fame 49 In 2012 she was commemorated with an iron bust of her head at the Writer s Corner in the Central West End neighborhood of St Louis across the street from Left Bank Books 50 See also EditLiterature of LouisianaNotes Edit Chopin Kate Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on May 16 2021 Chopin The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved July 23 2019 Chopin Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved July 23 2019 Frequently Asked Questions about Kate Chopin KateChopin org Barton Gay 1999 Chopin Kate O Flaherty American National Biography online ed New York Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 anb 9780198606697 article 1600295 subscription required Nilsen Helge Normann American Women s Literature in the Twentieth Century A Survey of Some Feminist Trends American Studies in Scandinavia Vol 22 1990 pp 27 29 University of Trondheim a b c William L Ed Andrews Hobson Trudier Harris Minrose C Gwwin 1997 The Literature of the American South A Norton Anthology Norton W W amp Company ISBN 978 0 393 31671 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Chopin Kate The Story of an Hour The Editors of KateChopin org The Storm Kate Chopin characters setting questions KateChopin org The Kate Chopin International Society Retrieved January 28 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last1 has generic name help a b Fred Lewis Pattee A History of American Literature Since 1870 Harvard University Press p 364 a b Literary St Louis Noted Authors and St Louis Landmarks Associated With Them Associates of St Louis University Libraries Inc and Landmarks Associate of St Louis Inc 1969 Beer Janet 2008 The Cambridge Companion To Kate Chopin Cambridge University Press pp 13 26 ISBN 9781139001984 Toth and Seyersted Emily and Per 1998 Kate Chopin s Private Papers Indiana University Press pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0253331120 Marriage certificate between Oscar Chopin and Katie O Flaherty accessed on ancestry com on October 19 2015 Biography www katechopin org Retrieved December 11 2015 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved April 16 2022 a b Toth Emily 1990 Reviews the essay The Shadows of the First Biographer The Case of Kate Chopin Southern Review 26 a b c d Short Story Criticism An Introduction to Kate Chopin 1851 1904 Short Story Criticism 116 2008 Seyersted Per 1985 Kate Chopin A Critical Biography Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State UP ISBN 978 0 8071 0678 5 a b c d e O Flaherty 1984 Kate Chopin An Introduction to 1851 1904 Twentieth Century Literary Criticism 14 Toth Emily 1990 Kate Chopin William Morrow amp Company Inc ISBN 9780688097073 Walker Nancy 2001 Kate Chopin A Literary Life Palgrave Publishers a b c Le Marquand Jane Kate Chopin as Feminist Subverting the French Androcentric Influence Deep South 2 1996 a b c Shurbutt Sylvia Bailey The Can River Characters and Revisionist Mythmaking in the Work of Kate Chopin The Southern Literary 68 14 23 Kate Chopin A Re Awakening Interview Elizabeth Fox Genovese Emory University March 14 2008 a b c d Larrabee Denise Chopin Kate 1850 1904 American Writers Retrospective Supplement 2 a b c d Kate Chopin Biography Foy R R 1991 Chopin s Desiree s Baby Explicatory No 49 pp 222 224 Gibert Teresa Textual Contextual and Critical Surprises in Desiree s Baby Connotations A Journal for Critical Debate vol 14 1 3 2004 2005 pg 38 67 Chopin Kate A Visit to Avoyelles Bayou Folk 1893 pg 223 229 a b c d e Cutter Martha Losing the Battle but Winning the War Resistance to Patriarchal Discourse in Kate Chopin s Short Fiction Legacy A Journal of American Women Writers 68 a b c d e Susan Green An overview of The Awakening Literature Resource Center a b c d e f Bender Bert September 1991 The Teeth of Desire The Awakening and The Descent of Man American Literature 63 3 459 473 doi 10 2307 2927243 JSTOR 2927243 a b Mou Xianfeng Kate Chopin s Narrative Techniques and Separate Space in The Awakening The Southern Literary Journal a b Cutter Martha The Search for a Feminine Voice in the Works of Kate Chopin Unruly Tongue Identity and Voice in American Women s Writing 127 87 109 America Literature United States of America McDougal Littell 2008 p 758 ISBN 978 0 618 56866 6 a b XII THE AWAKENING Kate Chopin and Her Creole Stories University of Pennsylvania Press January 31 1932 doi 10 9783 9781512805659 015 ISBN 9781512805659 Kessler Carol Farley Toth Emily December 1991 Kate Chopin A Life of the Author of The Awakening American Literature 63 4 755 doi 10 2307 2926892 ISSN 0002 9831 JSTOR 2926892 Franklin Benjamin 2010 Research guide to American literature Facts On File ISBN 9780816078615 OCLC 699681835 a b Toth Emily July 1999 Emily Toth Thanks Kate Chopin The Women s Review of Books 16 10 11 34 doi 10 2307 4023250 ISSN 0738 1433 JSTOR 4023250 a b Ostman Heather O Donoghue Kate 2015 Ostman Heather O Donoghue Kate eds Introduction Kate Chopin in Context New Approaches Kate Chopin in Context New Approaches American Literature Readings in the Twenty First Century New York Palgrave Macmillan US pp 1 11 doi 10 1057 9781137543967 1 ISBN 978 1 137 54396 7 retrieved January 19 2022 a b Kornasky Linda 2011 Discovery of a Treasury Orrick Johns and the Influence of Kate Chopin s The Awakening on Edith Summers Kelley s Weeds Studies in American Naturalism 6 2 197 215 doi 10 1353 san 2011 0025 ISSN 1944 6519 S2CID 145614976 Winn Harbour 1992 Echoes of Literary Sisterhood Louisa May Alcott and Kate Chopin Studies in American Fiction 20 2 205 208 doi 10 1353 saf 1992 0000 ISSN 2158 415X S2CID 162207140 The awakening a novel of beginnings March 1 1994 Simons Karen Spring 1998 Kate Chopin on the Nature of Things PDF The Mississippi Quarterly 51 2 p243 Kate Chopin A Re Awakening About the Program www pbs org Retrieved March 19 2018 Treme as a season ends so does a life The Atlantic June 2010 accessed 25 June 2014 Welborn Vickie October 1 1888 Loss of Kate Chopin House to fire devastating The Town Talk permanent dead link St Louis Walk of Fame St Louis Walk of Fame Inductees stlouiswalkoffame org Archived from the original on October 31 2012 Retrieved April 25 2013 Kate Chopin Bust Unveiled West End Word Retrieved January 8 2014 Further reading Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Kate Chopin Wikisource has original works by or about Kate Chopin Kate O Flaherty Chopin 1988 A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography Vol I p 176 Koloski Bernard 2009 Awakenings The Story of the Kate Chopin Revival Louisiana State University Press Baton Rouge LA ISBN 978 0 8071 3495 5 Eliot Lorraine Nye 2002 The Real Kate Chopin Dorrance Publishing Co Pittsburgh PA ISBN 0 8059 5786 3 Berkove Lawrence I 2000 Fatal Self Assertion in Kate Chopin s The Story of an Hour American Literary Realism 32 2 pp 152 158 Toth Emily 1999 Unveiling Kate Chopin University Press of Mississippi Jackson MS ISBN 1 57806 101 6External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kate Chopin Works by Kate Chopin in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by or about Kate Chopin at Internet Archive Works by Kate Chopin at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Kate Chopin Novelist And Short Story Writer Kate Chopin at American Literature Kate Chopin A Re Awakening PBS documentary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kate Chopin amp oldid 1138110912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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