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- The Awakening contains many symbolic features, such as the way Edna uses art, the birds
- (the parrot and the mockingbird), sleep, music, and the houses Edna Pontellier lives in, but
- perhaps two of the most significant symbols are the clothes in the novel, not only of Edna,
- but also the other characters, and the water, whether it be the ocean, the gulf, or the sea.
- These two symbols are possibly the most significant because of their direct relationship to
- Edna Pontellier. Both the water and her clothes have the power to not only emphasize, but
- help show exactly how and what Edna is feeling.
- Clothes appear to have significant meaning in The Awakening, enough so that they
- are mentioned at almost every description of the characters. Edna Pontellier starts the novel
- fully dressed and appropriately dressed for a woman of her responsibilities, however, at her
- final moment, she is naked on the beach. Other women in the story also represent their
- ‘position’ and the way they feel in the way they dress. For example, Madmoiselle Reisz
- never changes her clothes. This could possibly symbolize her physical detachment from
- anything around her, including nature and any suppressed feelings. In contrast, Edna’s
- clothes represent her physical attachment to society. She sheds her clothes the way a snake
- sheds its skin when it is time for a new one and it does not fit into the old one any longer.
- Edna doesn’t feel like she can fit into society any longer. Madmoiselle Reisz, on the other
- hand, does not seem to have any desire to be more than what she has been given in the
- society in which she lives. Therefore, she does not change her clothes, because she does not
- feel the need for change in her life.
- Other characters, such as Madame Leburn always have new clothes to cover their
- bodies. This could, perhaps, represent the constant need to cover their sexuality as women in
- suppressed roles as wives and mothers. Ednas’ nakedness at the end of the novel symbolizes
- her freedom from any claims her children may have on her and shows how her lack of clothes
- is equal to her lack of ‘responsibility’, of her family and the 1890s’ society.
- The Ocean is a clear symbol of freedom for Edna. The water is where Edna feels
- replenished and she begins to realize that she is not satisfied with her life and roles as wife
- and mother. This happens on the day she learns to swim, which is something she had wanted
- to accomplish all summer. By learning to swim, she is empowered and becomes more
- self-aware, of not only her sexuality, but also of who she is and not who society says she
- should be.
- The water in The Awakening could be seen to symbolize Edna’s rebirth into a more
- assertive woman. Every time she enters the water, she gets stronger, until finally her strength
- is more powerful than her love for her children, or her life. At this point she goes so far out
- to sea, that the water takes back the strength it had geven her.
- Both the water and the clothes in the novel are very important symbols, both helping
- to emphasize Edna Pontellier’s new life. She starts the novel as a very suppressed woman
- (fully clothed) and ‘covered by society and its’ strict roles, and then ends naked as if she is
- escaping the restricted boundaries of her clothes and of society. The water is a constant
- source of new life for Edna, and as her clothes are removed to go into the water, they are
- replaced by a more greater sense of power and energy, the freedom that the water has helped
- her realize.
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- Words: 620
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