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         Chopin Kate:     more books (101)
  1. At Fault by Kate Chopin, 2010-07-06
  2. The Awakening and Selected Stories of Kate Chopin (Enriched Classics (Pocket)) by Kate Chopin, 2004-06-29
  3. The Awakening by Kate Chopin, 2010-09-30
  4. Kate Chopin: Complete Novels and Stories: At Fault / Bayou Folk / A Night in Acadie / The Awakening / Uncollected Stories (Library of America) by Kate Chopin, 2002-09-30
  5. The Awakening: Literary Touchstone Classic by Kate Chopin, 2005-03-01
  6. The Awakening (Norton Critical Editions) by Kate Chopin, 1993-09-17
  7. The Awakening (Cliffs Complete) by Kate Chopin, 2001-03-20
  8. The Awakening: And Other Stories (World's Classics) by Kate Chopin, 2008-10-15
  9. The Awakening and Selected Short Fiction (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) by Kate Chopin, 2005-03-28
  10. The Complete Works of Kate Chopin (Southern Literary Studies)
  11. The Awakening by Kate Chopin, 2008-07-30
  12. Kate Chopin in the Twenty-First Century: New Critical Essays by Heather Ostman, 2008-01-08
  13. The Awakening, with eBook by Kate Chopin, 2009-02-02
  14. Kate Chopin: A Critical Biography by Per Seyersted, 1980-04-01

1. Kate Chopin - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Kate Chopin (born Katherine O Flaherty on February 8, 1850 – August 22, 1904) was an American author of short stories and novels, mostly of a Louisiana
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kate_Chopin
Kate Chopin
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search Kate Chopin
Kate Chopin in 1894 Born February 8
St. Louis, Missouri
United States Died August 22
St. Louis, Missouri
United States Occupation Novelist, short story writer Genres realistic fiction Literary movement feminist Kate Chopin (born Katherine O'Flaherty on February 8 August 22 ) was an American author of short stories and novels , mostly of a Louisiana Creole background. She is now considered to have been a forerunner of feminist authors of the 19th century. From 1889 to 1902, she wrote short stories for both children and adults which were published in such magazines as Atlantic Monthly Vogue , the Century , and Harper's Youth's Companion . Her major works were two short story collections, Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie (1897). Her important short stories included " Desiree's Baby ", a tale of miscegenation in antebellum Louisiana; " The Story of an Hour " and " The Storm Chopin also wrote two novels: At Fault (1890) and The Awakening (1899), which is set in New Orleans and Grand Isle . The people in her stories are usually inhabitants of Louisiana. Many of her works are set about Natchitoches in north central Louisiana. In time, literary critics determined that Chopin addressed the concerns of women in all places and for all times in her literature.

2. Biography Of Kate Chopin
Kate Chopin was born Kate O Flaherty in St. Louis, Missouri in 1850 to Eliza and Thomas O Flaherty. She was the third of five children, but her sisters died
http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/eng384/katebio.htm
Biography of Kate Chopin
by Neal Wyatt
Kate Chopin was born Kate O'Flaherty in St. Louis, Missouri in 1850 to Eliza and Thomas O'Flaherty. She was the third of five children, but her sisters died in infancy and her brothers (from her father's first marriage) in their early twenties. She was the only child to live past the age of twenty-five. In 1855, at five and a half, she was sent to The Sacred Heart Academy, a Catholic boarding school in St. Louis. Her father was killed two months later when a train on which he was riding crossed a bridge that collapsed. For the next two years she lived at home with her mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother, all of them widows. Her great-grandmother, Victoria Verdon Charleville oversaw her education and taught her French, music, and the gossip on St. Louis women of the past. Kate O'Flaherty grew up surrounded by smart, independent, single women. They were also savvy and came from a long line of ground breaking women Victoria's own mother had been the first woman in St. Louis to obtain legal separation from her husband, after which she raised her five children and ran a shipping business on the Mississippi. Until Kate was sixteen, no married couples lived in her home, although it was full of brothers, uncles, cousins, and borders. She returned to the Sacred Heart Academy, where the nuns were known for their intelligence, and was top of her class. She won medals, was elected into the elite Children of Mary Society, and delivered the commencement address. After graduation she was a popular, if cynical, debutante. She wrote in her diary advice on flirting, "just keep asking 'What do you think?'" (Toth, 62).

3. Author Profile: Kate Chopin
Kate Chopin (18501904) is known for her depictions of culture in New Orleans, Louisiana, and of women s struggles for freedom. Chopin was born Katherine
http://www.teenreads.com/authors/au-chopin-kate.asp
var gDcsId = "dcskti1vc10000chxa0maatv9_2u3o";
Kate Chopin BIO ARTICLE Kate Chopin was born in St. Louis in 1851. She married Oscar Chopin in 1870, and moved to New Orleans where he managed a general store. Over the next nine years they had six children. When his business failed, the Chopin family moved to Cloutierville, Louisiana. When he died of swamp fever in 1882, Kate Chopin began writing in order to support herself and her six children.
From the beginning, the subjects of her short stories were unconventional women. In "Wiser Than a God," the protagonist, Paula Von Stoltz rejects her suitor's offer of marriage because, she says, "it doesn't enter into the purpose of my life."
In one of her most famous stories, "A Point At Issue," Eleanor and Charles decide to marry, but under very unusual circumstances.
"In entering upon their new life they decided to be governed by no precedential methods. Marriage was to be a form that while fixing legally their relation to each other, was in no wise to touch the individuality of either; that was to be preserved intact. Each was to remain a free integral of humanity, responsible to no dominating actions of so-called marriage laws. And the element that was to make possible such a union was trust in each other's love, honor, courtesy, tempered by the reserving clause of readiness to meet the consequences of reciprocal liberty."

4. Louisiana Leaders: Notable Women In History: Kate Chopin
Kate Chopin s Cloutierville home has been restored and is accessible to the public. Known as the Bayou Folk Museum, it is a museum of 1800s Louisiana life,
http://www.lib.lsu.edu/soc/women/lawomen/chopin.html
Louisiana Leaders: Notable Women in History
KATE CHOPIN
AUTHOR Although a native of St. Louis, MO, Katherine O'Flaherty Chopin spent thirteen years of her married life in Louisiana, both in New Orleans and in Cloutierville (in Cane River country), and returned to her native home after her husband's death. Her family of birth was southern creole, so she was quite comfortable in her Louisiana life. New Orleans, Natchitoches Parish, and Grand Isle provide the settings for her fiction, and of her over 100 published stories, the best known of her short story collections are entitled "Bayou Folk" and "A Night in Acadie". Her stories were also published in the Saturday Evening Post The Atlantic Monthly ,and The Century among other periodicals and earned her the reputation of a "Louisiana Writer". She is best known for her second and last novel, The Awakening , which was published to cries of scandal in 1899, and is now regarded as a classic novel written by a woman at the turn of the century. Used widely in women's studies courses, the novel describes one woman's awakening and subsequent revolt against socially prescribed roles for women and their sexuality. It is routinely assigned in first year college classes in American literature. Kate Chopin's Cloutierville home has been restored and is accessible to the public. Known as the Bayou Folk Museum, it is a museum of 1800s Louisiana life, including a blacksmith's shop and country doctor's office.

5. St. Louis Walk Of Fame - Kate Chopin
KATE CHOPIN small star. Katherine O Flaherty, a member of one of St. Louis oldest families, attended the St. Louis Academy of the Sacred Heart.
http://stlouiswalkoffame.org/inductees/kate-chopin.html
ST. LOUIS WALK OF FAME
K ATE C HOPIN
Katherine O'Flaherty, a member of one of St. Louis' oldest families, attended the St. Louis Academy of the Sacred Heart. When she married New Orleans native Oscar Chopin, she encountered the Creole culture which provided settings for many of her works. She wrote more than 100 short stories in the 1890s, and hosted a literary salon in her home at 3317 Morgan Street. Her 1899 novel, The Awakening , was condemned for its frank treatment of a young woman's sexual and artistic growth. Now it is recognized both for the quality of the writing and for its importance as an early feminist work.
George Chopin, grandson, accepted the award on behalf of Ms. Chopin. Date of Birth Field/Achievement Location of Star Date of Induction Literature 6310 Delmar Inductees Location of Stars Nomination Criteria Induction Ceremony ... Acknowledgements
1997-2002 St. Louis Walk of Fame

6. Kate Chopin Biography And Summary
Kate Chopin biography with 493 pages of profile on Kate Chopin sourced from encyclopedias, critical essays, summaries, and research journals.
http://www.bookrags.com/Kate_Chopin
Literature Guides Criticism/Essays Biographies Research Anything: All BookRags Literature Guides Essays Criticism Biographies Encyclopedias History Encyclopedias Films Periodic Table ... Amazon.com Kate Chopin Summary
Kate Chopin
About 493 pages (147,904 words) in 26 products
"Kate Chopin" Search Results
Contents: Biographies Works by Author Summaries Reference Criticism Biography
Name: Katherine Chopin Variant Name: Kate Chopin Birth Date: February 8, 1851 Death Date: August 22, 1904 Place of Birth: St. Louis, Missouri, United States Nationality: American Gender: Female Occupations: author
summary from source:
Biography
of Katherine Chopin
12,571 words, approx. 42 pages
summary from source:
Biography
of Katherine Chopin
7,708 words, approx. 26 pages
Kate Chopin introduced to the reading public a new fictional setting: the charming, somewhat isolated region along the Cane River in north central Louisiana, an area populated by Creoles, Acadians, and blacks. Beginning in the 1960s, her fiction was... summary from source:
Biography
of Katherine Chopin 5,813 words, approx. 19 pages

7. Kate Chopin - Wikipedia
Translate this page Als Kate Chopin 1904 starb, hatte die Kritik ihrer Zeit die Qualität ihres Werkes noch nicht erkannt. Bis zu seiner Wiederentdeckung war The Awakening
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kate_Chopin
Kate Chopin
aus Wikipedia, der freien Enzyklop¤die
Wechseln zu: Navigation Suche Kate Chopin. Kate Chopin 8. Februar als Katherina O'Flaherty in St. Louis 22. August ) war eine amerikanische Schriftstellerin . Bekannt ist sie in erster Linie als Autorin des erstmals erschienenen Romans The Awakening Das Erwachen ), der heute zum literarischen Kanon der englischsprachigen Literatur z¤hlt. Daneben verfasste sie zahlreiche Kurzgeschichten Katherine O'Flaherty war v¤terlicherseits irisch katholischer Abstammung, m¼tterlicherseits franz¶sischer Abstammung. Sie war das dritte und j¼ngste Kind von Thomas O'Flaherty und seiner zweiten Frau, Eliza geb. Faris, die einer alten franz¶sischen Familie von Saint Louis entstammte. Ihr Vater verstarb allerdings (ebenso wie sp¤ter ihre Schwester) bereits w¤hrend ihrer Kindheit. heiratete sie den Plantagenerben Oscar Chopin, zog mit ihm nach New Orleans und bekam sechs Kinder. SchlieŸlich begann sie zu schreiben. Ein befreundeter Arzt hatte ihr dazu geraten. Zahlreiche Erz¤hlungen von ihr erschienen in groŸen Zeitschriften. Der Roman, der sie sp¤ter ber¼hmt machen sollte

8. Kate Chopin --  Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Britannica online encyclopedia article on Kate Chopin American novelist and shortstory writer known as an interpreter of New Orleans culture.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9082339/Kate-Chopin
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Kate Chopin
Page 1 of 1 born Feb. 8, 1851, St. Louis, Mo., U.S.
died Aug. 22, 1904, St. Louis Katherine O'Flaherty American novelist and short-story writer known as an interpreter of New Orleans culture. There was a revival of interest in Chopin in the late 20th century because her concerns about the freedom of women foreshadowed later feminist literary themes. Chopin, Kate... (75 of 332 words) To read the full article, activate your FREE Trial Commonly Asked Questions About Kate Chopin Close Enable free complete viewings of Britannica premium articles when linked from your website or blog-post. Now readers of your website, blog-post, or any other web content can enjoy full access to this article on Kate Chopin , or any Britannica premium article for free, even those readers without a premium membership. Just copy the HTML code fragment provided below to create the link and then paste it within your web content. For more details about this feature, visit our

9. WowEssays.com - Kate Chopin
Kate Chopin is an American writer of the late nineteenth century. She is known for her depictions of southern culture and of women s struggles for freedom.
http://www.wowessays.com/dbase/aa4/dli196.shtml
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Kate Chopin Bibliography Chopin, Kate. The Awakening. New York: Dover, 1993. . Night in Acadie. The American Short Story Series. Vol. 8. New York: Garrett, 1968. Seysrsted, Per, ed. Kate Chopin: A Critical Biography. New York: Octagon, 1980. Showalter, Elaine. Tradition and the Female Talent: The Awakening and a Solitary Book. The Awakening. Ed. Nancy A. Walker. Boston: Bedford, 1993. 169-89. Word Count: 1441 Design by Dream Net Studio

10. Kate Chopin
Kate Chopin Electronic Books Online. Enjoy Free Classic Books. Site Map Electronic Library Kate Chopin. Kate Chopin. Read some great literature free
http://www.classicbookshelf.com/library/kate_chopin/
Enjoy Free
Classic Books Site Map Electronic Library
Kate Chopin
Read some great literature free on Classic Bookshelf. Choose a book from this list or choose another author from the Electronic Library The Awakening and Selected Short Stories

11. Kate Chopin (1850-1904)
kate chopin, bibliography and links to information and all texts available on the web, information.
http://www.wsu.edu/~campbelld/amlit/chopin.htm
Home Literary Movements Timeline American Authors ... American Literature Sites
Kate Chopin (February 8,1850-August 22,1904)
Kate Chopin: Bibliography of Secondary Sources
"Desiree's Baby": Selected Secondary Bibliography

At Fault:
...
Reading questions for "The Story of an Hour"
Noted Kate Chopin scholar Prof. Barbara Ewell's essay " Changing Places: Women and the Old South" Biographical Sketch (from The Encyclopedia of Southern Culture
Biographical sketch and photograph of Chopin's home
at The Literary Traveler , which also provides short contemporary essays about the homes of other American writers.
Kate Chopin House Museum
includes pictures and a brief biographical sketch.
Hypertext study version of "The Story of an Hour"
by Prof. Ann Woodlief of VCU. See also the related student site on The Awakening , which includes .midi files of the Frederic Chopin preludes played by Mlle. Reisz.
Kate Chopin: A Reawakening
. This PBS site includes a transcript from the program on Kate Chopin, which aired on June 23, 1999.
Harriet J. Bouman's

12. Kate Chopin
Small personal site dedicated to the writer. A biography and other essays.
http://www.angelfire.com/nv/English243/Chopin.html
"Perhaps it is better to wake up after all,
even to suffer; than to remain a dupe
to illusions all one's life." "...on a sentimental greeting card,
Kate scrawled, 'Very pretty, but where's the point?'"
"Whatever we may do or attempt, despite the embrace and transports of love, the hunger of the lips, we are always alone. I have dragged you out into the night in the vain hope of a moment's escape from the horrible solitude which overpowers me. But what is the use! I speak and you answer me, and still each of us is alone; side by side but alone.' In 1895, these words, from a story by Guy de Maupassant called 'Solitude', which she had translated for a St Louis magazine, expressed an urbane and melancholy wisdom that Kate Chopin found compelling. To a woman who had survived the illusions that friendship, romance, marriage, or even motherhood would provide lifelong companionship and identity, and who had come to recognize the existential solitude of all human beings, Maupassant's declaration became a kind of credo."
Kate Chopin: The Woman "There are some people who leave impressions not so lasting as the imprint of an oar upon the water."

13. Kate Chopin: The Awakening, The Storm, Stories, Biography
Accurate information on kate chopin biography, The Awakening, At Fault, short stories. For students, scholars, and readers.
http://www.katechopin.org/
KateChopin.org
THE KATE CHOPIN INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY
26 January 2008 HOME BIOGRAPHY THE AWAKENING AT FAULT ... About this web site
In Her Own Words
"Even as a child she had lived her own small life all within herself. At a very early period she had apprehended instinctively the dual life—that outward existence which conforms, the inward life which questions." Description of Edna Pontellier in The Awakening. "She wanted to reach out her hand in the darkness and touch him with the sensitive tips of her fingers upon the face or the lips. She wanted to draw close to him and whisper against his cheek—she did not care what—as she might have done if she had not been a respectable woman." Description of Mrs. Baroda in "A Respectable Woman."
Her short stories were well received in her own time (continue)
"There would be no one to live for her during those coming years; she would live for herself. There would be no powerful will bending hers in that blind persistence with which men and women believe they have a right to impose a private will upon a fellow-creature." Description of Mrs. Mallard in

14. Kate Chopin : Teacher Resource File
Welcome to the Internet School Library Media Center kate chopin page. You will find biography, bibliography, lesson plans and other resources on this page.
http://falcon.jmu.edu/~ramseyil/chopin.htm
Kate Chopin (1850-1904)
Teacher Resource File
Welcome to the Internet School Library Media Center Kate Chopin page. You will find biography, bibliography, lesson plans and other resources on this page. The ISLMC is a meta-site for librarians, teachers, parents and students. You can search this site, use an index or sitemap
Biography
E-texts Criticism ... Lesson Plans
Biography
Kate Chopin
Biography, her career, The Awakening
bibliography by Audrey Hoffman, Kutztown University
EducETH: Kate Chopin
Biography; bibliography; chronology; geographical information;
criticism; The Awakening; short stories; lesson plans;
from . From EducETH
Kate Chopin
Biography; audio file
Kate Chopin, Domestic Goddess
Biography, criticism. From Women Writers
PBS. Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening
Transcript of PBS documentary, interviews, chronology, library
Kate Chopin
From Norton Anthology of American Literature
Kate Chopin Biography
From empirezine.com
Kate Chopin: A Woman Ahead of Her Time
Biography, criticsm, newspaper pieces, other leading women of the era
Kate Chopin Web Page
Biography; student interpretation of

15. GradeSaver: ClassicNote: Biography Of Kate Chopin
While kate chopin never flouted convention as strongly as did her fictitious heroine, she did exhibit an individuality and strength remarkable for
http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/authors/about_kate_chopin.html
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Biography of Kate Chopin (1850-1904)
Kate Chopin Published in 1899, The Awakening created a scandal because of its portrayal of a strong, unconventional woman involved in an adulterous affair. While Kate Chopin never flouted convention as strongly as did her fictitious heroine, she did exhibit an individuality and strength remarkable for upper-middle-class women of the time. Born on February 8, 1850 in St. Louis, Katherine O'Flaherty Chopin was the daughter of an immigrant Irish father and a French Creole mother. The O'Flahertys were members of the Creole social elite and were fairly well off. When Kate was very young, her father Thomas O'Flaherty died in a work-related accident. He left behind a family of four generations of women all living in the same house. Kate was very close to her maternal great-grandmother, Madame Charleville, who first introduced her to the world of storytelling. Madame Charleville spoke only French to Kate and told her elaborate, somewhat risqu? stories. Family tragedy surrounded the young Kate. When she was eleven, Madame Charleville died, and her half-brother George was killed while fighting in the Civil War for the Confederate side. Yet Kate does not seem to have completely despaired: she earned a reputation as the "Littlest Rebel" when she tore down a Union flag that had been tied to her front porch by Yankee soldiers. Had Kate not been a young girl at the time, the incident might have resulted in serious consequences, but as it was, it became famous as local legend.

16. Kate Chopin: A Re-Awakening
Companion Web site to the Louisiana Public Broadcasting documentary profiling author kate chopin.
http://www.pbs.org/katechopin/
var gaJsHost = (("https:" == document.location.protocol) ? "https://ssl." : "http://www."); document.write(unescape("%3Cscript src='" + gaJsHost + "google-analytics.com/ga.js' type='text/javascript'%3E%3C/script%3E"));
About the Program
Interviews Chronology
Electronic Library
... Credits Originally premiered Wednesday, June 23, 1999 on PBS ( check local listings
Funding Provided in Part by Grants From:

17. Kate Chopin: Domestic Goddess
Domestic Goddess kate chopin was born Katherine O Flaherty, in St. Louis, Missouri. Her parents were from Irish and Creole backgrounds.
http://www.womenwriters.net/domesticgoddess/chopin1.htm
(Note: Some biographers, including Emily Toth, cite 1850 as Chopin's birthdate, others, including Marilynne Robinson in the preface to The Awakening , say 1851). Criticism
Domestic Goddesses Home

Domestic Goddess Kate Chopin was born Katherine O'Flaherty, in St. Louis, Missouri. Her parents were from Irish and Creole backgrounds. When Chopin was widowed at 32, she began writing to support herself and her six children. She was widely accepted as a writer of local color fiction, and was generally successful until the publication of her scandalous novel The Awakening , in 1899. Perched between the social conservatism of the nineteenth century and dealing with tabooed themes too soon for the growingly open twentieth, the novel's sexually aware and shocking protagonist, Edna Pontillier, pushed Chopin into literary oblivion. Chopin, and her memorable characters and stories, finally emerged from society's morally imposed ostracization during the resurgence of women's rights in the early 1970's. Even today, much of the criticism of Chopin's most famous work centers on Edna Pontillier's morals is she a fallen woman, a bad mother, a selfish human being? Why does the character still, in an era where sexual openness is not totally condemned, point us toward a discussion of what makes a woman "bad?" What does the novel say about constrictions and constructions of the feminine role, today and during the time it was written? What does the novel say about human consciousness, and conscience?

18. Kate Chopin: The Story Of An Hour
kate chopin was a forgotten American voice until her literary reputation was resuscitated by critics in the 1950s. Today her novel The Awakening (1899) the
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~wldciv/world_civ_reader/world_civ_reader_2/chopin.html
Kate Chopin: The Story of an Hour (1894)
Kate Chopin was a forgotten American voice until her literary reputation was resuscitated by critics in the 1950s. Today her novel The Awakening (1899) the story of a sensual, determined woman who insists on her independence, is widely read and highly honored, a feminist work which was decidedly ahead of its time. Born Katherine O'FIaherty into an upper-middle-class family in St. Louis, she married Oscar Chopin when she was twenty and moved to her husband's home in Louisiana. In the ten years that she resided in Louisiana she was aware of and receptive to Creole, Cajun, black, and Indian cultures, and when she later came to write fiction, she would incorporate people from these cultures in her work, especially her short stories. When her husband died as a young man, Kate Chopin returned to St. Louis with her six children. Financially secure, she began writing fiction as best she could while rearing her children. She is a good example of an American realist, someone trying to represent life the way it actually is lived, and she acknowledged her debt to the contemporary French naturalists Emile Zola and Guy de Maupassant. Does the psychological ambivalence dramatized in "The Story of an Hour" ring true or uncomfortably real when we consider honestly our own feelings?

19. PAL: Kate Chopin (1851-1904)
It was banned from the hometown St. Louis library and kate chopin was denied membership in a local arts club. Her other works include her first novel,
http://web.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap6/chopin.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben (To send an email, please click on my name above.) Chapter 6: Kate Chopin (1851-1904) Primary Works Selected Bibliography 1980-1999 Selected Bibliography 2000-Present Study Questions ... Home Page
Source: PBS - KC Primary Works At Fault , (1890); "The Story of an Hour" ( E-Text Bayou Folk A Night in Acadie The Awakening The Awakening (April 22, 1899) The novel was condemned all over America on moral grounds. It was banned from the hometown St. Louis library and Kate Chopin was denied membership in a local arts club. Her other works include her first novel, At Fault (1890), and two collections of short stories, Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Acadie Principal Characters: Edna Pontellier , a who experiences an awakening - she discovers her need to be an individual rather than merely a wife and mother; Leonce Pontellier , her Creole husband, treats Edna as if she were a possession; Robert Lebrun , a gentle young man who falls in love with Edna;

20. Kate Chopin (1851-1904)
A Guide to Research kate chopin (from Domestic Godess site by Elizabeth Blakesley A Guide to Internet Resources for kate chopin s The Awakening (1899)
http://www.nagasaki-gaigo.ac.jp/ishikawa/amlit/c/chopin19re.htm
Kate Chopin (1851-1904)

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