A vivid portrait of the author of The Awakening on the 100th anniversary of its publication
This is the true, unvarnished life story of the
girl who grew up to write The Awakening, a masterpiece published
100 years ago. With its portrayal of a woman whose sexual desires take
her outside marriage, it rocked American literature's cozy conception of
womanhood.
In Unveiling Kate Chopin Emily
Toth, the foremost authority on Chopin's life and works, creates a sharply
revealing portrait of a modern woman in a Victorian world. Born in St.
Louis in 1850, Kate O'Flaherty was raised by wealthy, feisty widows and
educated by brilliant nuns. She endured a mysterious "outrage" committed
against her by Union soldiers in her teens and suffered what moderns now
call a "loss of voice." But she survived to become a lively, dangerously
clever social observer.
She had the talent and then the life experiences
to become a writer. Her Louisiana-born husband, Oscar Chopin, had
grown up in France and did not restrict her. In New Orleans (where
she gossiped with the painter Edgar Degas) and then in rural Louisiana
(where the neighbors hated her), Kate produced six children in nine years.
Yet she retained her individuality and her wicked sense of humor.
After her husband's sudden death, Kate's affair with another woman's husband
was a village scandal--but following the lessons of the French women who
raised her, she knew when to leave.
After the death of her mother, Kate reinvented
herself as the author of engaging short stories set in Louisiana.
Many had unusual social messages. "In Sabine" opposed domestic violence.
"At the 'Cadian Ball" supported sexual expression for women. "Odalie
Misses Mass" suggested that interracial friendships between African American
and white women were possible. She condemned the idle rich and celebrated
single mothers. To promote her own career, she created the first
salon in St. Louis and became the first woman in the city to become a professional
fiction writer. Although she claimed to be un-serious about her craft,
newly discovered manuscripts, which Toth mines for the insights they offer,
reveal her as a dedicated artist who wanted to reach her readers' hearts.
Toth portrays Chopin as a bright, ambitious
woman who ruffled staid souls, and when she published The Awakening,
her foes pounced. Many reviews of the novel were uncomprehending;
many were vicious and her next book was canceled. Her family suffered;
her health declined; and Chopin died in 1904, silenced ahead of her time.
Now, a century later, Toth sees Chopin as a woman of unique wit and astonishing
talent and as the daring author who wrote the most radical, notorious American
novel of the late nineteenth century.
Emily Toth, a professor of English and Women's Studies at Louisiana
State University, is the author or editor of ten books, including Kate
Chopin's Private Papers, "A Vocation and a Voice": Stories by Kate
Chopin, and Ms. Mentor's Impeccable Advice for Women in Academia.
290 pp.