Wednesday, May 29, 2019

feminaw Rebirth of Edna Pontellier in Kate Chopins The Awakening :: Chopin Awakening Essays

Rebirth in The Awakening      The time Edna spends in water is a suspension of space and time this is her first attempt at realizing Roberts impermanence. In a strange way, Edna is taking her self as an object of meditation, where at the consummation of self absorption, she should be able to see through her own selflessness. As she swam she seemed to be reaching for the unlimited in which to lose herselfemphasis added (Chopin 74). Edna has left her earthly institution on the shore and looked forward to a new existence, with the unlimited, or nirvana as a tantalizing prize on the other shore. Her splay lies in looking back.       When Edna looked back toward the shore, she notices the people she left there. She also notices that she has not covered a great distance. Then a quick vision of finale smote her soul (Chopin 74), a sense of death that reaffirms her selfhood and reminds her of her clinging to Robert. Her meditation is broken by the wavering of her mind to other objects and senses. Her struggle to regain the shore becomes a soma of near-death experience, at the end of which comes an utter physical exhaustion, a stretching of her selfs physical boundary. Ednas intellectual self, the mind, another creation of ignorance, awakens as well. She begins to feel like one who awakens piecemeal out of a dream, a delicious, grotesque, impossible dream, to feel again the realities pressing into her soul (Chopin 78).      As Ednas fortified ego emerges ashore, her attachment to Robert is strengthened. The intimate moment they voice at the end of the chapter bespeaks an acme of bliss, where no multitude of words could have been more significant than those moments of silence, or more pregnant with the first-felt throbbings of desire (Chopin 63, 77).      After Ednas metempsychosis from the sea, her sense of self blossoms. She pulls away from the crowd and begins to do as she pleases . Lonce Pontelliers stern command for her to come inside after the swim goes unheeded. Edna realizes that her go forth has blazed up, stubborn and resistant. In Buddhist philosophy, the concept of the will is one of the five aggregate that forms the self. Ednas recognition of her will is a good indication that her ego is full formed, and that in a sense she has moved farther away from achieving nirvana.

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