Thursday, February 7, 2019
Female Protagonists Essay -- essays research papers
The desire for freedom is a similar aspect of the young-bearing(prenominal) protagonists Louise Mallard, Mathilde Loisel, and Emily Grierson.In Kate Chopins, "The Story of an Hour," Guy DE Maupassants, "The Necklace," and William Faulkners, "A Rose for Emily," the female protagonists have a desire for freedom. The stories are about three women living in gray societies. Each character longs for freedom in a different way, and because of the men in their lives they are unable to make their own support decisions.In "The Story of an Hour," Louise Mallard is a repressed married woman that has a heart condition. The reaction to her hubbys presumed death is a sign that she is unhappy. After audience the tragic news she goes up stairs to her room and looks out an throw window and notices "new spring life", "the delicious breath of precipitate", and "countless sparrows twittering in the eaves." As she looks out the window among the storm clouds, she stares at patches of blue sky. "It was not a glance of reflection, but rather indicated a suspension of intelligent thought." Louise is not grieving over her dead husband or having negative thoughts about her future. She realizes that she will have freedom with her husbands death and whispers over and over, "free, free free" Her unhappiness is not with her husband, it is with her rank in society because she is a married woman. Becoming a widow is the only cha...
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