The Story of an Hour.”
Identity and Selfhood—Chopin examines issues of “female self-discovery and identity” through having her main character demonstrate extreme feelings of grief upon learning of her husband’s death, only to have those feelings immediately replaced by an indescribable feeling she can only describe as "free, free, free!" or as having "abandoned herself." In essence, she has basically lived through her husband, and now that she thinks he is gone, she realizes with astonishing exhilaration that she is free and her life is her own once again. Imagine her sense of complete devastation upon his return.
The Story of an Hour.” Identity and Selfhood—Chopin examines issues of “female self-discovery and identity” through having her main character demonstrate extreme feelings of grief upon learning of her husband’s death, only to have those feelings immediately replaced by an indescribable feeling she can only describe as "free, free, free!" or as having "abandoned herself." In essence, she has basically lived through her husband, and now that she thinks he is gone, she realizes with astonishing exhilaration that she is free and her life is her own once again. Imagine her sense of complete devastation upon his return.
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