The Hour of the Century In Kate Chopin’s, “The Story of an Hour,” a dynamic story takes place in a short amount of time. The story begins with the protagonist, Louise Mallard, being told that her husband, Brently Mallard, has died from a railroad disaster. She grieves for a while and then goes upstairs to her room. She stares out an open window until she realizes that she is finally free. Liberated by her newfound freedom, Mrs. Mallard celebrates. Unfortunately, Mrs. Mallard’s freedom is snatched away from her in a matter of moments because Mr. Mallard was nowhere near the railroad disaster, and he is alive. Once Mrs. Mallard sees Mr. Mallard alive, she dies from a heart attack. The main reason that “The Story of an Hour” can have a plot that develops in such a short time frame is because the story has an immense feel of irony from the first line to the last. “The Story of an Hour” uses all three types of irony, situational, dramatic, and verbal, to tell a captivating story. Scattered throughout the story are several examples of situational irony. Situational irony, “involves a discrepancy between what is expected to happen and what actually happens. Situational irony occurs when the exact opposite of what is meant to happen, happens” (Pandya). One example of situational irony occurs after Richards tells Mrs. Mallard the news of Mr. Mallard’s death; she walks upstairs to her room to be alone. Although the reader expects Mrs. Mallard to grieve more, she does not.
Everyone has lost a loved one or has seen and experienced a situation in which another person has lost their loved one. In “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin, published in 1894, details that moment in a woman's life when her world is shattered and the process of self-consciousness begins. Louise Mallard, wife of Richard Mallard, a successful businessman. Louise Mallard is a woman ahead of her time, by the standards of the 1890’s she should be happy. Her husband loves her; she herself acknowledges that he “had never looked save with love upon her.”(Chopin, p.477) In the 1890’s women depended on their husbands financially. There was an unspoken rule that the man was the powerful one, the wife would conform to the
How would one feel to hear the news of a significant other or loved one who has passed away due to an accident? The news is heartbreaking and rather unimaginable. “Sorry to say but your husband has died due to an accident.” No one wants to hear those words or go through the painful time. In “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin’s, the death of her husband meant freedom and happiness. Chopin’s uses a great deal of symbolism throughout the story in order to depict the theme of freedom and happiness.
One of the main reasons that “The Story of an Hour” is able to have a plot that develops in such a short time frame is because it has an immense feel of irony from the first line to the last. Scattered throughout the story are several examples of situational irony, when the effect of an event is unexpected by the reader, and dramatic irony, when the reader knows what is happening, but the characters do not. One example of situational irony occurs when Mrs. Mallard walks upstairs to her room to be
Then the best usage of irony occurs. The reader sees the first reaction of Mrs. Mallard’s husbands death. Josephine would tell her the news and Mrs. Mallard takes it pretty hard. The author Kate Chopin lets us know that she seems to take Brently Mallards death pretty hard by the words “She wept at once, with sudden, wild abandonment, in her sister’s arms.” (157) They see that she is weeping and she wants to be alone because she storms off to her room alone. (157) But then the reader reads “But now there was a dull stare in her eyes, whose gaze was fixed away off yonder on one of those patches of blue sky. It was not a glance of reflection, but rather indicated a suspension of intelligent thought.” (157) This is telling the reader that Mrs. Mallard feels something that is coming to her. Then Mrs. Mallard says softly “free, free, free!” (157) This event could be both dramatic and situational. It could be dramatic because only the reader or audience knows the true feelings Mrs. Mallard has for her husband, while all of the characters are not in the room with her and do not know her true feelings. This excerpt of the small story could also be situational because most people would think that when a spouse would die, there would be grief and pain felt rather than joy of being free from her husband. Only the reader knows that this is not the case for Mrs. Mallard because she is feeling freedom and has her own soul back which
Situational irony involving a situation in which actions have an effect that is opposite from what was intended, so that the outcome is contrary to what was expected. Throughout the whole story, Chopin has created an ironic vibe and a misleading theme with Mrs. Mallard. Instead of Mrs. Mallard being sad and heartbroken, she is free and happy. Mrs. Mallard “was drinking in a very elixir of life through that open window,” not showing signs of depression of sadness.
Kate Chopin uses the literary element of irony throughout the short story “The Story of an Hour” in which the character Mrs. Mallard has to go through after a tragic event. Mrs. Mallard and her husband live together in a house. One day Mrs. Mallard’s sister and her husband’s friend heard the news that Mr. Mallard had died and tell Mrs. Mallard what happened. This short story describes in an abundance of detail what her inner thoughts in that one hour are and how it affects her sister and her husband’s friend as they try to keep her safe and calm. In the short story, “The Short Story of an Hour” is written by the author Kate Chopin which is about one eventful hour of Louise Mallard the wife of Brently Mallard. In the short story “The Story
In Mark Twain words, “Sanity and happiness are an impossible combination”, Being sane is defined as someone who is rational and behaves normal. In the selection “A Rose for Emily” by William Faulkner, Miss. Emily is seen as someone who lacks sanity and is portrayed as an insane woman, but content with her introverted life. On the other hand, we have Mrs. Mallard from “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin, who is a married woman but she lacks true happiness in her life. These two selections show that rationality and happiness is an impossible thing to achieve in a world where women are oppressed and beneath men. Secrets are held deep inside them, and in the end no one knows the truth behind them. Furthermore, both of these women shared a common origin of their problem; however, their outlook on life, their actions, and their surroundings are
Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour" is the story of Louise Mallard's reaction to the news of her husband being killed during a train wreck. Everyone takes great care in telling her the tragic news because of her heart problem. Louise was very heartbroken and sad when she first learned about her husbands death. She then has an epiphany in which she realizes she is now free. Chopin conveys throughout the story that marriages can be oppressive. The theme is express by Louise Mallard change of emotions and feelings throughout the story.
Imagine this, a women happy and excited that her husband is dead.Well that’s how “The Story of an Hour” was written.When a close family friend and relative deliver news that a young woman’s husband is dead, the results are highly unexpected.The young women Mrs.Mallard has heart trouble so it had to be broken gently.At first she’s heartbroken,but when she goes up to her room she’s...happy?Her sister brings her down stairs as Mr.Mallard walks through the door,she dies, and at the hospital it’s pronounced that she died of joy that kills.This story is a great example of situational and dramatic irony and this essay will explain it.
In the short story, “The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin, it tells you about a woman with an internal and external conflict. In this story a woman is told about the “devastating” news about her husband’s death, how she reacts explains to the reader what her internal and external conflicts are. Mrs.Mallard has several conflicts in the story including her inner feeling, her outer feelings, and her conflicts with society.
Dramatic irony is established when the readers are aware of Mrs. Mallard’s feelings towards her husband’s death, everyone, especially Josephine, believed that Mrs. Mallard is upset by the news. Josephine, who is separated from her sister by a door believed that Mrs. Mallard is going to make herself ill over the news of her husband, when in reality Mrs. Mallard is actually full of joy and looking forward to the “long years” ahead.
Kate Chopin's 1894 short story “The Story of an Hour” shows the main character Louise Mallard's emotional roller coaster with the incorrect knowledge of her husband's untimely demise from a train wreck. This short story dives deep into the gender inequality of the time using the gingerly way the family informs her of her husband's demise due to what the writer refers to as 'heart trouble', to her sister’s reaction to Louise exclaiming “Free! Body and soul free!” (151). Kate Chopin places you in in Louise’s chair, forcing the reader to empathize and interpret her feelings rather than explicitly stating what the woman is going through. Leaving the information ambiguous about who or what is her oppressor allows the reader to infer as to what
While reading “The Story of An Hour” The story showed that death can bring such gladness and independence into someone’s life. Kate Chopin throws some complex matters involved in the chemistry of feminine independence, love, and marriage over her brief but actual portrayal of the allegedly widowed Louise Mallard in her last hour of life. After finding out that her husband has died caused by a train accident, Mrs. Mallard faces contradictory emotions of sorrow at her husband's death and joy at the prospects for freedom for the rest of her life.
“The Story of an Hour” is a short story, written in 1894, by Kate Chopin. There is an underlying theme of social issues, such as independence or freedom for women in the 1800’s. This is displayed throughout the story through the setting of the story taking place in the 1800s, through the plot and character development of Louise Mallard, and through various symbols.
Kate Chopin’s short story, “The Story of an Hour (1894),” portrays that the confinements placed on women due to gender roles was unjust. Chopin illustrates this through the progression of Mrs. Mallard's emotions and thoughts after learning of her husband's supposed death, as well as alluding to their form of marriage. Chopin's purpose is to point out how unjust woman were treated in society in order to bring about change on such treatment. Given the time period, Chopin dedicated her short story to women and fellow feminists.