Thursday, September 19, 2019
A Rebirth and a Death in Kate Chopin?s ?The Story of an Hour? :: essays research papers
Kernelââ¬â¢s and Satellites Kate Chopinââ¬â¢s story, ââ¬Å"The Story of an Hourâ⬠is an ironic short story of a wife in the late 1800ââ¬â¢s. The story is only a few pages long and in doing so Chopin writes a story filled with kernelââ¬â¢s (events that have important causal chronological coherence) with very few satelliteââ¬â¢s (events not logically essential to the narrative action). There were no satellites that I could find while reading the text; I found every word written essential to the narrative, the progression and the conclusion of the story. Freytagââ¬â¢s Pyramid and Functionââ¬â¢s Upon examining Freytagââ¬â¢s pyramid, I can see that the narrative does follow this diagrammatic representation of the story structure. From the inciting moment (Mrs. Mallardââ¬â¢s heart trouble, and Mr. Mallards ââ¬Å"deathâ⬠) to the climax (Mrs. Mallards becoming of a free independent person) to the catastrophe (Mrs. Mallardââ¬â¢s death) we can follow Freytagââ¬â¢s design. The most interesting element to the story, following Freytagââ¬â¢s pyramid, is the reversal; Chopin surprises us in Mrs. Mallardââ¬â¢s reaction to her husbandââ¬â¢s death. The reversal is Mrs. Mallardââ¬â¢s joyful acceptance of his death, her realization of freedom; the narrative twists the story to the exact opposite of what the reader was expecting. The reversal of the readers expectation is a much more effective way for Chopin to express her message. The element in the reversal also has the role of a function (an act defined by its significance for the course of action in which it appears). A death would usually be thought of as a tragedy, but once we start to gain insight on Mrs. Mallardââ¬â¢s character we can see why she responds with the opposite reaction. Another function within the story is the ââ¬Å"joy that killsâ⬠it makes sense in this story, but in most you would see an immense joy at Mr. Mallardââ¬â¢s return, these circumstances would not often see a wife dying from, what I assume is, a miserable shock. Acts and Happenings Once examining the story I found an interesting insight on Mrs. Mallard in terms of acts and happenings; the happenings (a change of state not brought about by an agent and manifested in the discourse in the act of happen) are events out of Mrs. Mallards control, and the acts (a change of state brought about by an agent) are Mrs. Mallards emotional realizations and her change of outlook on life and death rather than physical actions: Mr.
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