Summary and analysis of Kate Chopin's short story, "Desiree's Baby."
Analytical Essay # 49865 |
1,723 words (
approx. 6.9 pages ) |
0 sources |
2004
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$ 33.95
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Abstract
This paper begins with a summary of the plot of "Desiree's Baby" and then provides an analysis of the story's main characters and its theme. The paper describes how "Desiree's Baby" sends a message that judging another human being based on his or her skin color is completely immoral and unjustified.
From the Paper
"Kate Chopin's short story, "Desiree's Baby," begins by explaining how Desiree comes to live with Monsieur and Madame Valmonde. Monsieur Valmonde finds her as a child sleeping on his property, and he and his wife decide to raise her. When Desiree grows up, Armand Aubigny falls in love with her, and despite Monsieur Valmonde's warnings that Desiree's origins are unknown, Armand marries her and they have a baby boy. At first, they are both extremely proud and happy, and Armand even treats his Negro slaves kindly because he is in such a joyful state of mind. However, Armand's manner changes when the baby is three months old: he stops looking into Desiree's eyes when he speaks to her, he treats the slaves awfully, and he seems to fall out of love with Desiree. Desiree is miserable and cannot understand why her husband has changed."
Tags:baby, slaves, dark, negro, judging, love, wife, child, conflict, mother, unconditional
This paper examines the work 'Desiree's Baby' by Kate Chopin.
Book Review # 98490 |
1,613 words (
approx. 6.5 pages ) |
7 sources |
MLA | 2007
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$ 31.95
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Abstract
In this article, the writer notes that Kate Chopin's short story 'Desiree's Baby' investigates both racial otherness and gender differences. The writer points out that the plot of the story, having as its climax point the discovery of the traces of black genealogy in Desiree's baby, seems to focus on racism primarily. However, the writer discusses that looking at the story from a different angle, one can say that the gender conflict plays an even more important part in the structure of the story. The writer concludes that Chopin draws a very powerful image of the patriarchal society specific to her time, but still lingering in the present, in which only the man has the power to act in which the woman is nothing more than her social role, and this role she has to perform with a null identity so as the man might assert his own identity.
From the Paper
"However, even at first glance Armand seems to prove that he can fight prejudice and cross over such social barriers as the lack of a noble name, his attitude here is actual the first sign of male possessiveness and aggressive dominance over the woman: he will give Desiree his own proud name, and in the act Desiree will become one of his valuable pieces of property."
"The fact that Armand treats Desiree as a piece of property and an accessory to his estate and to his old name is reinstated when the baby is born and he proves to be a male, and which significantly contributes to the father's masculine pride."
Tags:racism, slaves, Armand, symbolic, name
An analysis of Kate Chopin's short story "Desiree's Baby".
Essay # 71245 |
690 words (
approx. 2.8 pages ) |
3 sources |
MLA | 2003
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$ 14.95
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Abstract
This paper looks at Kate Chopin's short story "Desiree's Baby" and discusses issues of gender, race and social status. It contends that Desiree is a helpless victim of a patriarchal society.
From the Paper
"Kate Chopin's early short story Desiree's Baby contains the themes that inform the fiction of Chopin, a woman who lived before her time whose stories might be seen as a vindication of the rights of women and an author whose literary works were .."
Tags:Chopin, Gender, Racism, Fiction, Story, Theme, Race, Patriarchal
This paper analyzes the story 'Desiree's Baby' by Kate Chopin and discusses the theme of racism.
Book Review # 123627 |
750 words (
approx. 3 pages ) |
7 sources |
MLA | 2008
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$ 16.95
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An analysis of Kate Chopin's short story "Desiree's Baby." The analysis argues that Chopin uses the tale of a baby whose parents' race is put into question when he looks mixed-race is meant to demonstrate the hypocrisy of the old South whose lies destroyed lives due to racism and slavery.
From the Paper
"Kate Chopin's short story 'Desiree's Baby' tells the story of Desiree and Armand and their baby whose seemingly mixed racial heritage creates an uproar in the racist American south of the era. Themes of racism oppression rumor and sexism pervade the story. However the overriding theme of the work is that despite the prevalent racist in the South of the era race-mixing was more common than thought though it remained hidden. The society that perpetuated racism against African-Americans was a society based on pride ..."
Tags:mixed race, Chopin, African Americans, blacks, slavery, history, women, oppression, birth, ethnicity
This paper analyzes the short story "Desiree's Baby" by Kate Chopin, specifically its ending.
Book Review # 98864 |
1,425 words (
approx. 5.7 pages ) |
4 sources |
APA | 2007
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$ 28.95
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This paper explains that the core theme of Kate Chopin's short story "Desiree's Baby" is race and race relations. The author points out that the reader should be aware of the clues, sprinkled throughout this dark story, which reveal the real character of Armand and hint at the twisted ending. The paper relates that the clues in the story, from the dark, brooding house to the unhappy slaves to the stigma of a child, which appears to have black blood, are symbols of the racism rampant in the South before and after the Civil War. The paper includes many quotations.
From the Paper
"Chopin creates a chilling work that seems at first to be light and loving. The truth is that Armand blames the child's origins on Desiree, who cannot cope with the loss of his love and kills herself because of it. He is little more than a murderer because he hides the truth from everyone and lets Desiree bear the shame of carrying Negro blood, when it is really Armand himself who is the culprit. The story is horrifying and especially so because the ending is so shocking."
Tags:race, clues, symbols, negro, mood
An analysis of the imagery in Kate Chopin's "Desiree's Baby".
Book Review # 93229 |
1,071 words (
approx. 4.3 pages ) |
0 sources |
2007
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$ 22.95
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This paper examines how the light and dark imagery in Kate Chopin's story "Desiree's Baby" reinforces the social value placed on skin color in the time period and setting of the story and how, it is also a source of irony. It looks at how the mixed-race child delivered by the main character raises a question that has an unexpected answer and how the irony of the answer is caused by faulty assumptions that characters make and accept until the real truth comes to light. It shows how images of darkness and light reflect on people, physical setting and secrecy and truth.
From the Paper
"The author alludes to Armand's "dark, handsome face" a number of times, but suspicion for the responsibility of the dark-skinned child still falls on Desiree's white shoulders because her parentage is unknown. When the child reaches three months old, Desiree begins to realize that the "love-light seemed to have gone out" of Armand, but she does not understand why until one hot afternoon as she watches her child sleeping on the bed. Suddenly, the realization that her baby has a similarity with the quadroon child who is fanning the baby with peacock feathers dawns on Desiree and she feels her veins turn to a paralyzing "ice." "
Tags:armand, race, skin, color
A look at feminism, realism and racial-dynamics in Kate Chopin's "Desiree's Baby".
Analytical Essay # 40779 |
1,400 words (
approx. 5.6 pages ) |
5 sources |
2002
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$ 28.95
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This paper looks at critical interpretations of Kate Chopin's "Creole local color" story 'Desiree's Baby.' The criticism comes from three separate schools: feminist, realist, and racial-dynamic, all of which are discussed in the paper with regard to the story.
Reviews Kate Chopin's use of imagery and symbolism in her short story "Desiree's Baby".
Analytical Essay # 18078 |
675 words (
approx. 2.7 pages ) |
1 source |
1990
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$ 14.95
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From the Paper
"In her short story "Desiree's Baby," Kate Chopin creates an image of Louisiana society and bolsters that image with her use of color imagery and symbolism. The society is sketched in lightly with references to the people, the places, and the mores of the society, and the use of color helps create this image while also foreshadowing the ending of the story. The important conflict is indicated early in the story--Monsieur Valmond? is described as "practical" and as wanting to know "the girl's obscure origin" (49-50). Armand Aubigny, on the other hand, is in love and does not care.
Contrasts between black and white, light and dark, sun and shade, are made throughout the story. Significantly, the child Desiree is found in the shadow of the pillar, and Armand falls in love with her 18 years later while she stands in that same..."
Tags:LITERATURE, AMERICAN: GENERAL
This paper reviews the short stories "Desiree's Baby" and "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin.
Analytical Essay # 83733 |
675 words (
approx. 2.7 pages ) |
3 sources |
2005
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$ 14.95
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This paper explains that these short stories by Kate Chopin show clear insight into women's liberation for the protagonists Desiree and Mrs. Mallard. The author points out that the slow process of change from submissive wife to independent woman are clear as Chopin reveals the critical turning points which allow these women to separate themselves from their dominating husbands. The paper describes the way that the women in these stories learn independence and freedom from domestic patriarchal institutions.
From the Paper
"This study examines the transformation of male dominated women into independent heroines within the short stories: "Desiree's Baby" and "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin. By analyzing these feminist tales, a transformation takes place that reverses both Mrs. Mallard and Desiree from victims of patriarchal households, into women with free ambitions to be govern their own lives. Chopin, in these two stories, presents women that do not wish to live under the domination of their husbands, and take the necessary steps to achieve independent lives. In the story "Desiree's Baby", Chopin presents Desiree as a woman who is unaware that she has African American roots in her lineage. Armand, her cruel slave-owning husband marries her, but does not tell her that she and her baby are both related to the slaves on the plantation."
Tags:chopin, desiree, mallard
A review of Desiree McGraw's "The Case For Kyoto: A Question of Competitiveness, Consultations, Credibility, Commitment and Consistency".
Essay # 34287 |
1,650 words (
approx. 6.6 pages ) |
3 sources |
2002
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$ 32.95
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Abstract
This essay will examine Desiree McGraw's "The Case For Kyoto: A Question of Competitiveness, Consultations, Credibility, Commitment and Consistency" and will discuss what can be termed Canada's glacial progress toward the Kyoto accord as indicative of the recent performance and functioning of Canada's political system.