Theme Of Freedom In Kate Chopin's A Rose For Emily

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In the end, Louise and Emily are unsuccessful seeking for their physical freedom in their relationships because freedom results in their deaths. Louise and Emily fall sick and go crazy when they seek for freedom. Louise gets the sense of freedom knowing her husband is dead, but does not actually make the physical escape to leave her relationship. She stays locked in her room and does not leave. Instead, she only contemplates about her love for her husband and the reason to escape her relationship. Therefore, “of joy that kills her” (Chopin 54) explain how the joy of her freedom kills her because she no longer has her freedom when her husband comes back alive. Initially, her freedom is taken away because she will be still living under the …show more content…
Emily tries to preserve her relationship with her father towards her relationship with Homer. The only way Emily preserves her relationship with Homer, is to kill him and lock his body in her room. Killing and locking his body illustrates Emily’s freedom because she knows her father robbed her from any past relationships; thus, she preserves her freedom without letting go of the man she broke the rules with against her father. (Getty 231) Similarly to Louise, Emily is unsuccessful because she dies locking Homer, unable to physically find freedom to move on. The structuralist point of view establishes Emily’s subconscious ideology to repeat her experiences that affect her actions. She is caught up living in the past and longs for her freedom against her father; thus, she takes advantage of Homer so he does not …show more content…
Both women focus on their past experiences to decide how to find their freedom. Instead, they do not take the initiative to take control of their actions. "The Story of an Hour" and "A Rose for Emily" use multiple imageries to enhance Louise and Emily’s motive of freedom respectively to escape the men in their lives. Rather, both women are mentally free because they escape the social norms of men controlling their feelings. Except, they do not physically find freedom because Louise and Emily are physically trapped in their home that preserves their freedom. Instead, Louise and Emily long for freedom when they die because freedom kill

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