Tuesday, September 17, 2019
Analysis of ââ¬ÅThe Story of an Hourââ¬Â by Kate Chopin Essay
The short story ââ¬Å"The Story of an Hourâ⬠was written by Kate Chopin and first appeared in 1984. It tells about the ââ¬Ëone hourââ¬â¢ brief story of the main protagonist, Louise Mallard, and her reaction upon hearing the news of her husbandââ¬â¢s death by a car accident. And because she had a heart problem, her sister Josephine and her husbandââ¬â¢s friend Richards decided to break to her the news as gently as possible. Not long after the supposedly bad news was revealed, Brently, Louiseââ¬â¢s husband, suddenly comes home alive disproving the former, causing death to her by heart attack. Majority of the storyââ¬â¢s progression revolve around Louiseââ¬â¢s reaction upon hearing the news about her husbandââ¬â¢s death (Brian, 2001). The scenes where Louise isolate herself in her room and savor her new-found freedom add up to the hanging idea of the real reason behind her death. It seems that the author actually give two possible emotional state to answer the underlying question of Louiseââ¬â¢s joyful death: one is that she has become too overwhelmed to see her husband alive in contrary to the news about his involvement in a recent car accident and the other one is that she is saddened by the realization of the freedom that she thought she will have after hearing her husbandââ¬â¢s loss is completely taken away from her again. Contrasting Representations Suprisingly, the short-story is written in complete contrasts of the main theme. First of these contrasting representations within the story is Louiseââ¬â¢s reaction upon hearing the news. The news about her husbandââ¬â¢s death should bring her agony and tears but instead; she sits calmly ââ¬Å"facing the open window, a comfortable, roomy armchair. â⬠Here we see a strange approach to the situation with the word ââ¬Å"comfortableâ⬠being used to modify the chair near the window. Louise, a new widow herself, must not see the chair as ââ¬Å"comfortableâ⬠as it seems just right after hearing the unbearable news of her husbandââ¬â¢s death. Added to this, the scene outside the window also symbolizes something in contrast to the storyââ¬â¢s progression. The spring day from the view outside her window shows a contrasting image to the situation she has. The spring is a symbol of ââ¬Å"rebirthâ⬠or ââ¬Å"new lifeâ⬠thus the spring prognosticates Louiseââ¬â¢s new life after Brentlyââ¬â¢s death. Another interesting symbol in the story is the description of the view laid upon Louiseââ¬â¢s eyes as she sits near the window: ââ¬Å"The delicious breath of rain was in the air. In the street below a peddler was crying his wares. The notes of a distant song which some one was singing reached her faintly, and countless sparrows were twittering in the eavesâ⬠(Brian, 2001). For the readers, the description made by Louise about the view she was seeing clouds what her true emotions were at that moment. It seemed that as she isolated herself in a room, she completely disregarded the news of her husbandââ¬â¢s death. These representations had become tricky in contrasting the main theme the story supposes to have or tell. Kate Chopinââ¬â¢s idea of a Joyful Death: Appearance versus Conflict What the readers may discover in reading this story is the possibility that there is an ironic truth behind the death of the main protagonistââ¬â¢s beloved. In the main setting of the story where Louis sits in a comfortable chair, she mouth over the words we never expect to read or hear from her. She seems to be happy rather than being sad about Brentlyââ¬â¢s loss with what the story emphasizes on her shouting ââ¬Å"free, free, free! â⬠The freedom she pertains here signifies of her having the will to live a life all by herself, after her husband is gone. As she plays a youthful characteristic of a woman, it is a well played proof that she was indeed after the freedom, of doing what she want to do and make decisions for herself. With this fact, the story seems to have a conflict of its own: conflict between the ideas of appearance and reality. From the moment that the story emphasizes about Louise having her ââ¬Å"freedomâ⬠at last, it could suggest the notion to the reader(s) that she is not saddened by the news. Unlike what she had shown in the central point of the story, Louise somehow is expected to grieve by the people around her, all having the idea that her marriage with Brently was a happy one. This is what her sister Josephine completely understood with her reaction as she misinterprets Louiseââ¬â¢s behavior and thinking. She hysterically calls out her sister in the room, believing that Louise is heart-broken but in reality, Louise is more lightened up by the news. The doctorsââ¬â¢ judgment about Louiseââ¬â¢s death also deals with this conflict. For them, it seemed that Louise died after realizing that her husband is alive. This appearance of Louiseââ¬â¢s happiness is more illustrated when they predicted that due to heart attack ââ¬Å"of joy that killsâ⬠(Brians, 2001). Never did they think of the reality that she died because of another reason. That she dies because she was heart-broken to recognize the truth that she will not be able to gain her freedom as what she expected earlier. Role of Woman versus Man Another conflict in the story accentuates the role of woman versus man in the society. It is illustrated in the story that Louise is a submissive wife to Brently. But there is an internal struggle within her that tells that she was not happily married at all. As what Louise thinks, ââ¬Å"What could love, the unsolved mystery, count for in face of this possession of self-assertion which she suddenly recognized as the strongest impulse of her beingâ⬠justifies more to the idea that she, indeed, had loved Brently but more were the times she feel not. Maybe for Brently, Louise appeared to be happy with their relationship or he thinks and assumes that she is. Apparently, Louise wanted more the freedom she had felt for in that short while. After finding out the truth that she was not yet totally free, she had thought that only by death that she would took possession of it at last. There in death she would find peace and liberty. Ironically, Louise took the realization that her husband was alive and chose to die in able to attain the freedom she longed for. Character Analysis Chopin made her characters compliment along with the theme of the story. The main character, Louise plays a youthful wife who tends to have her freedom despite her marriage with Brently. Her youth marked up the end of her life and this irony of life, of choosing liberty by death, seemed to be one of the uncertain situations in the matter of choosing life over death. Brently, although his character is not discussed further on in the story, seemed to be playing a role of a husband who wants her wife under his control. Louise would never want liberation if he was a good man to her. His characteristic gives a deeper impact in the story, making Louise choose to die with freedom rather than living with him in a life full of despair. Josephine, Louiseââ¬â¢s sister, was recognized here as a doting sister who takes care of her and all the matters that has a connection with her. Josephine, together with Richards, had taken care of gently telling to her the ââ¬Å"deathâ⬠of her husband Brently. She half-concealed the truth, in order for Louise to accept it without suffering her heart problem. Richards, Louiseââ¬â¢s friend, is the one who brought the news to the house, he is responsible for assuring Brentlyââ¬â¢s death. As he rushes to tell the news to his friend, there is a suggestive truth that he was worried about what his friendââ¬â¢s reaction would be after hearing the news. If he had not rushed over to deliver the news, there is a possibility that Brently could arrive first in the house and justify that his name in the news is a big mistake, preventing Louiseââ¬â¢s death and would have lived more. Apart from Brently, Richards is also responsible for the protagonistââ¬â¢s death. The story gives us the impression that not every death could bring grief to someone. It could be, in another way, a joyful event. Chopin had also brought about the issues of women and their role in the society. The story, written in the nineteenth-century, showed how women years back had no rights to be at their own will. Women then were still under the prying eyes of the society and men dominate over them. Chopin tackles a lot of moral issue within the story. Her story suggests that it would still be better if women of her own time maintain their roles in the society. In the nineteenth-century, men are expected to be superior over women and not the other way around, not what Louise wanted to be. Her insights within the story inspires us with the vision of what harmonious relationships are ought to be and the wide complexity in bearing the contrasting truth between appearance and reality. References: Brians, Paul. et al. Reading about the World. (Vol. 2) 3rd Edition. Texas: Harcourt Brace College, 2001.
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