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Kate Chopin (1851-1904) LINKS Kate Chopin Web Sites http://wwwtc.nhmccd.cc.tx.us/bluebonnet/education/lrc/chopweb.htm This Web site, maintained by the Tomball College Library, offers links to the Kate Chopin Project, Perspectives in American Literature, Documenting the American South, American Literature, and Southern Literature: Women Writers, among others. This is the best place to begin your Web research on Kate Chopin.
Documenting the American South: Kate Chopin This excellent site, maintained by the librarians at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is devoted to the history and culture of the American South. It includes biographical information on Kate Chopin, as well as dust jackets for the first printings of The Awakening, Bayou Folk, and A Night in Acadie. This site also includes links to slave narratives, a discussion of the role of the church in the southern Black community, and literature of the Civil War.
PAL: Perspective in American Literature: A Research and Reference Guide This useful, comprehensive site from California State University at Stanislaus offers links to other Kate Chopin Web sites, information on the conference on the 100th anniversary of The Awakening, an excellent bibliography of works by and about Chopin, and photographs of the author.
Southern Literature: Women Writers This site, part of the Internet School Library Media Center at James Madison University, offers an introduction to Southern literature, its characteristics, and information on the finest Southern writers of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It features links to information about Kate Chopin, Eudora Welty, Katherine Anne Porter, and Alice Walker. It also includes a bibliography of works about Southern literature.
BIOGRAPHY Friends encouraged her to write, and when she was nearly forty years old she published her first novel, At Fault (1890). Her stories began to appear in Century and Harper's Magazine, and two collections followed: Bayou Folk (1894) and A Night in Arcadie (1897). Her last major work, the novel The Awakening (1899), is her masterpiece, but its sympathetic treatment of adultery shocked reviewers and readers throughout America. In St. Louis the novel was taken out of the libraries, and Chopin was denied membership in the St. Louis Fine Arts Club. When her third collection of stories was rejected by her publishers at the end of 1899, Chopin felt herself a literary outcast; she wrote very little in the last years of her life. What affronted the genteel readers of the 1890s was Chopin's attempt to write frankly about women's emotions in their relations with men, children, and their own sexuality. After her mother's death in 1885, she stopped being a practicing Catholic and accepted the Darwinian view of human evolution. Seeking God in nature rather than through the Church, Chopin wrote freely on the subjects of sex and love, but she said she sadly learned that for American authors, "the limitations imposed upon their art by their environment hamper a full and spontaneous expression."
Chopin's work was rediscovered in the 1960s, and a third collection of stories A Vocation and a Voice was published posthumously in 1991.
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