Women should be strong, beautiful and intelligent. Still, women in the 18th century were drawn as servants who did not have a statement in the one hour story of Kate Chopin, and even with a good marriage, can not. What happens if my husband dies? How do they feel? Ironically, it is to lose everything that is free. In the 18th century, women were described as being helpless under men. Because when men became men and wives they gave them all.
Freedom of Kate Chopin's "One Hour Story" In "One Hour Story" of Kate Chopin, the theme is in the concept of how it is trapped in depressed, unsatisfied reality. Human unpleasant repression and manipulation. Combined with the beliefs of modern society - perhaps the story of the late nineteenth century - we can further understand Chopin's thoughts and emotions. - "One Hour Story" The disappointment to "One Hour Story" is a short story, and the author Kate Chopin often suggests unprecedented view of marriage. The couple's suppression in the "1 hour story" published in the latter part of the 18th century may reflect that era, but that is not all.
Self Identity, Freedom and Death in Kate Chopin's "One Hour Story" Kate Chopin's 1 hour story replied to her husband's death so I introduced us to Madame Marado. In this short story, Chopin depicts the complexity of Mrs. Marado's emotions because he feels sorrow and happiness about his loss. Kate Chopin's "story of an hour" insists that people can only find their self identity after being trapped. The story also believes that freedom is a very powerful force that influences the spiritual or emotional state of a person. The story finally claims that only by death it can be eventually released. Kate Chopin's "One Hour Story" thinks like this ... See more