"Here was life, not fiction," Chopin wrote of Guy de Maupassant in her diary. "Here was a man who escaped from tradition and authority, who had entered into himself and looked out upon life through his own being and with his own eyes; and who, in a direct and simple way, told us what he saw." (from Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening transcript) Guy de Maupassant was a French realist author of approximately 300 short stories, 6 novels, and various other writings who lived in the mid- to late- 19th century [b. 1850, d. 1893].
Introduce to your students concepts of realism, a literary movement in the 19th century that focused on reporting aspects of "common" life (common, of course, is a relative term). Chopin is often regarded as a practitioner of regionalism or local color (the two terms are often used interchangeably).
While the specific attributes of realism as a literary style are often debated, a dedication to verisimilitude is the basic precept. Regionalist or local color writing focuses on a particular setting and segment of society—often mimicking in print their manner of speech (their vernacular), their class system, and other social rules particular to the region, such as specific roles or assumptions for women or children (see the first passage in "Selected Passages" below for an example of the latter). See "Preparing to Teach" below for more definitions, and review the websites below for lists of specific attributes commonly found in realist, local color, and regionalist fiction.
Guiding Questions:
In what ways does Chopin's The Awakening reflect attributes of literary realism, local color, and/or regionalism?
How does the Louisiana setting and Creole culture of The Awakening work as an important component of Edna's transformation?
Learning Objectives
Define literary realism and discuss it as a style in American literature
Reflect on how culture and setting plays an important role in a novel, especially in local color and regional literature
[Students should read at least the first seven chapters of The Awakening before doing this in-class exercise]
Review the lesson plan. Locate and bookmark suggested materials and other useful websites. Download and print out documents you will use and duplicate copies as necessary for student viewing.
Electronic Texts
E-texts of The Awakening are freely available at the following locations:
The websites used in the Activity provide a greater amount of detail—and complication—of literary realism of the 19th century, but the following two definitions serve as good starting points.
In its literary usage, the term realism is often defined as a method or form in fiction that provides a "slice of life," an "accurate representation of reality."
—from the Columbia Dictionary of Modern Literary and Cultural Criticism, ed. Joseph Childers and Gary Hentzi
Literary realism is a 19th century conception related to industrial capitalism. In general, it means the use of the imagination to represent things as common sense supposes they are.
—from Bloomsbury Guide to Literature, ed. Marion Wynne-Davies
Literary realism is a variable, complex, and often argued about concept. No one work is a perfect example of 'realism'—Lesson #2 allows students to read through some basic attributes of realist literature in order to use that context to examine The Awakening. Practitioners of a realist style in the American tradition include William Dean Howells, Mark Twain, and Henry James.
Local Color and Regionalism
These two literary terms are often used interchangeably, and certainly they have many similarities. For the purposes of this lesson, students should not need to differentiate between the two, but for the teacher's clarity the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, excerpted in the EDSITEment reviewed website Documenting the American South, distinguishes them as follows:
Although the terms regionalism and local color are sometimes used interchangeably, regionalism generally has broader connotations. Whereas local color is often applied to a specific literary mode that flourished in the late 19th century, regionalism implies a recognition from the colonial period to the present of differences among specific areas of the country. Additionally, regionalism refers to an intellectual movement encompassing regional consciousness beginning in the 1930s.
In The Awakening, as well as her short stories, Chopin frequently focused on the Creole culture of Louisiana. Unique regional features included a heritage that drew from French and Spanish ancestry, a complex cast system, the settings of urban New Orleans and rural vacation retreats like Grand Isle (located on the Gulf Coast). Chopin's use of a culturally foreign protagonist - Edna was a protestant from Kentucky, rather than a French-speaking Catholic Creole like her husband—casts cultural differences into even sharper relief. Specific textual examples of Edna's encounter with Creole culture can be found in "Selected Passages" below.
Unfamiliar Words and French Phrases
Chopin's The Awakening is set in Louisiana—in the resort town of Grand Isle, as well as New Orleans. Often, the characters slip into French phrases, or Chopin uses words that might be unfamiliar to students—such as Creole or quadroon. Students should be encouraged to use either a print or online dictionary while reading—the Internet Public Library has several available, including Dictionary.com, which provides both English and French dictionaries.
Activity:
Have students visit one or more of the following sites (you might break them into groups to work on different sites), which detail aspects of Realism, Local Color, and Regionalism:
This section draws from the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture edited by Charles Reagan Wilson and William Ferris. Copyright (c) 1989 by the University of North Carolina Press, which is used by permission by Documenting the American South
The South played a major role in the local color movement that followed the Civil War. Although the beginning of the movement is usually dated from the first publication in the Overland Monthly in 1868 of Bret Harte's stories of California mining camps, a disproportionate number of contributors of local color stories to national magazines were southerners. The genesis of the local color movement was not surprising. The outcome of the Civil War signified the victory of nationalism over regional interests. With the increasing move toward urbanization and industrialization following the war and the concurrent diminishing of regional differences, it is not surprising that there was a developing nostalgia for remaining regional differences. Local color writing, which was regionally, and often rurally, based and usually took the form of short stories intended for mass consumption, met a need for stories about simpler times and faraway places
This section draws from the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture edited by Charles Reagan Wilson and William Ferris. Copyright (c) 1989 by the University of North Carolina Press, which is used by permission by Documenting the American South
Historical and Literary Contexts, through EDSITEment resource Scribbling Women (while this is ostensibly about Chopin's story "At the 'Cadian Ball," the background information is still applicable to The Awakening)
Students should research the attributes of realism, local color, and/or regionalism. Working in groups (group size as appropriate for class size), students should find a passage in the novel that exhibits one or more aspects of these styles. Students should list why the passage reflects realism, local color, or regionalism; they should read the passage closely, giving detailed evidence. Each group should present their passage and their findings while the instructor lists the passages and their attributes on the board. At the end of the class activity, several passages from the novel will be available for further discussion.
Teachers might want to lead the class through an example of the exercise using one passage (perhaps selected from one below). In this case, the teacher would lead a class analysis first, and then establish groups to perform the activity on their own.
Possible questions to explore as students encounter different passages may include:
How is the setting of the novel described? What are some unique features of the setting?
What are some attributes of Creole culture or behavior that are foreign to Edna or exclude her? What is Edna's background—how is she different?
How did the setting and culture create the environment that allowed for Edna's "awakening" while also condemning the choices that she made? Is there evidence of contradictory beliefs in the Creole culture that Chopin described?
What does Madame Ratignolle mean when she says to Robert of Edna: "She is not one of us; she is not like us. She might make the unfortunate blunder of taking you seriously" (beginning of Chapter VIII; page 64 Penguin Classics edition)? How is Edna different? What instances are there where Edna's "outsider" role affects or hinders her participation in Creole society?
Selected Passages
The following passages are only a few of many that students might examine in context
of realism, local color, or regionalism.
Edna is a Protestant from Kentucky, and her "outsider" status in the predominantly
Catholic, Creole society that she finds herself in helps illuminate the Creole
culture in Louisiana. Chapter
IV—especially the last few paragraphs—speaks specifically to
some of the cultural differences Edna encounters, including an "entire absence
of prudery," reconciled "with a lofty chastity which in the Creole women seems
to be inborn and unmistakable."
In Chapter
V, Edna, "with excessive naïveté," proposes that she might "make Alphonse
jealous"—a statement that amuses the Creoles in her presence, who know
"the Creole husband is never jealous." These statements are embedded in a
discussion of Robert's affections towards Edna, who knows that "he had often
spoken words of love to Madame Ratignolle, without any thought of being taken
seriously." Edna expresses relief that he "had not assumed a similar role
toward herself. It would have been unacceptable and annoying."
Note that Edna's "awakening" starts in Chapter
VI—"A certain light was beginning to dawn dimly within her—the
light which, showing the way, forbids it." In what way does the local culture
both allow and forbid her awakening? How does the region play a role in Edna's
transformation?
Chapter
VII has several significant passages, including Edna's recollection of
her life in Kentucky and how she met and married her husband. This passage
about Leónce—which begins (if searching via an e-text) "Her marriage
to Leónce Pontellier was purely an accident"—is wonderful for exploring
the reaction of Realism to the dangers of Sentimentalism. Edna's sweeping
passion for Leónce (and his for her) is later cooled by realities: "She grew
fond of her husband, realizing with some unaccountable satisfaction that no
trace of passion or excessive and fictitious warmth colored her affection,
thereby threatening its dissolution." Chopin is not only commenting on Edna
and Leónce's relationship—she is also attacking sentimentalist literature
that preceded the move towards realism. More details about sentimentalist
literature can be found under the "Types: Sentimentalism" section of The
Early American Novel: Introductory Notes, a resource available through
Literary Resources on
the Net from EDSITEment-reviewed Internet
Public Library
Assessment
Below are various assessment strategies that might be used alone or in combination:
Presentation:
Student groups should present the passage that they select to the classroom, discussing the various points of realism, local color, or regionalism as it pertains to their specific passage. Students should provide a close (rather than general) reading, pointing to specific phrases and ideas to support their ideas. Each group should come up with two or three discussion questions to share with the class that will further discussion.
Writing Assignment:
The teacher should select a passage not examined by students in class thus far and have students mine it for realism, local color, setting, and how it effects the portrayal of Edna and her situation. Alternatively, students might do a similar examination with Robert as their focus.
Creative Writing Assignment:
Ask students to write a local color or regionalist story or essay. They should try to emulate the style by portraying a place they live or have visited. Ask them to briefly reflect on how setting and culture influences what they wrote about.
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