The importance of the sea in Chopin's "Awakening" is different from Maria · Eugenia who chose not to satisfy her family's expectations in "Awakening" by Kate Chopin. When she walked to the last step of the sea, she told herself: "They do not need to think that they can have her, body and soul" (655). Edna cherishes autonomy and chose to die rather than family slavery. But her transformation journey, the title of the novel means not just to refuse her family role as wife and mother and her death.
In the analysis of Kate Chopin's "Awakening", Elaine Shawwalt and Elizabeth Lebron talked about the importance of Edna's awakening and homosexuality. They also agreed with the view that Edna returned to the sea in the last scene of a book representing Edna and her female lover, and found the satisfaction she was seeking. "Because the body of a woman is humid, it is looking at the evidence of the ocean's idea from a woman in Showalter.
Awakening Kate Chopin's "Awakening" in Chopin immediately caused controversy within the range that Edna Ponterie marked the emergence of the American fiction "female character" in the early 19th century. A contemporary of Kate Chopin (1851 - 1904) was shocked by the depiction of a woman with sexual desire. Even without accusing her main character, Chopin remains neutral ... I am trying to get rid of the male dominated society to find the identity by looking for words in the awakening Kate Chopin's novel "Awakening" The story of a woman in the latter half of the 19th century. Herself. Edna Pontellier is trying to find himself, but only characters that can be used are "real women", classic wives and mothers, "new women", extreme women seeking equality with men. Patricia S. Yaeger, in her article "A language that nobody can understand"