“The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin was a very enjoyable short
story in my opinion. For a short story, there was a lot of detailed imagery.
Kate Chopin has a great sense of her surroundings, and the way that she puts
them to paper is wondrous. I’ve commented about this a couple times in my
journal already about her imagery in The Awakening. I’ve stated in the
first entry that her writing is quite comparable to that of Fitzgerald’s in The
Great Gatsby.
On another note, I think that the plot twist in “The Story of an
Hour” was interesting. One would think that a woman would be upset that her
husband was dead, but Chopin doesn’t write of what was considered “the norm” in
her days. In the story, it doesn’t state anywhere that Brently Mallard was an
abusive or overpowering husband, and yet Louise Mallard felt that oppression
had been lifted after getting the news. She was oppressed by society’s stereotypes
and expectations of her.
Chopin seems to follow this theme frequently, though I can’t state
that for certain since I’ve only read “The Story of an Hour” and The
Awakening. However, both of these works follow the tale of a young female
protagonist that feels that they are oppressed by something. Both are married,
and both have the come-and-go feeling of love for their husbands.
If authors write from what they know, which I do firmly believe,
then is this feeling of oppression something that Kate Chopin felt herself? Did
she not like the idea of married life and following the expectations of
society? After skimming through a biography, it seems possible, but probably
unlikely. The biography stated that The Awakening was actually based off
of a woman that Chopin had known of in New Orleans. It also says that Chopin’s
husband, Oscar Chopin, “‘allowed’ her unheard of freedom.” Maybe she wasn’t as
oppressed by society as the women in her stories, but skimming through one
biography doesn’t make me completely sure of this.