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A Companion to the American Short Story

Page 34

by Alfred Bendixen

273 – 8 .

  Stephen Crane in Transition: Centenary Essays . Ed.

  Holton , Milne . Cylinder of Vision: The Fiction and

  Joseph Katz . Dekalb : Northern Illinois Univer-

  Journalistic Writings of Stephen Crane . Baton

  sity Press , 1972 . 127 – 52 .

  Rouge : Louisiana State University Press , 1972 .

  Conrad , Joseph . Introduction to Thomas Beer ,

  Johnson , George . “ Stephen Crane ’ s Metaphor of

  Stephen Crane: A Study in American Letters . New

  Decorum . ” Publications of the Modern Language

  York : Knopf , 1923 . 1 – 35 .

  Association 78 ( 1963 ): 250 – 6 .

  Crane , Stephen . Stephen Crane: Prose and Poetry .

  Lowell , Amy . Introduction to The Black Riders and

  New York : Library of America , 1984 .

  Other Lines . Vol. 6 of The Works of Stephen Crane .

  — — — . Tales of War . Vol. 6 of The Works of Stephen

  Ed. Wilson Follett . New York : Knopf , 1926 .

  Crane . Ed. Fredson Bowers . Charlottesville :

  ix – xxix .

  University Press of Virginia , 1970 .

  Miller , J. Hillis . Poets of Reality . Cambridge, MA :

  — — — . Tales, Sketches, and Reports . Vol. 8 of The

  Harvard University Press , 1965 .

  Works of Stephen Crane . Ed. Fredson Bowers .

  Nagel , James . Stephen Crane and Literary Impression-

  Charlottesville

  :

  University Press of Virginia

  ,

  ism . University Park : Pennsylvania State Uni-

  1973 .

  versity Press , 1980 .

  Stephen

  Crane

  151

  Paine , Ralph D . Roads of Adventure . Boston :

  — — — . “ Stephen Crane ’ s Struggle with Romance

  Houghton Miffl in , 1922 .

  in The Third Violet . ” American Literature 70 (June

  Robertson , Michael . Stephen Crane, Journalism, and

  1998 ): 265 – 91 .

  the Making of Modern American Literature . New

  Wertheim , Stanley , and Paul Sorrentino , eds. The

  York : Columbia University Press , 1997 .

  Correspondence of Stephen Crane . 2 vols. New York :

  Schaefer , Michael . A Reader

  ’

  s Guide to the Short

  Columbia University Press , 1988 .

  Fiction of Stephen Crane . New York : G. K. Hall ,

  — — — . “ Thomas Beer: The Clay Feet of Stephen

  1996 .

  Crane Biography . ” American Literary Realism

  Sorrentino , Paul . “ The Legacy of Thomas Beer

  1870 – 1910 22.3 ( 1990 ): 2 – 16 .

  in the Study of Stephen Crane and American

  Wolford , Chester L . Stephen Crane: A Study of the

  Literary History . ” American Literary Realism 35

  Short Fiction . Boston : Twayne , 1989 .

  ( 2003 ): 187 – 211 .

  11

  Kate Chopin

  Charlotte Rich

  After attending a convention of the Western Association of Writers in Indiana in

  1894, Kate Chopin wrote an essay in which she described the works of Midwestern

  authors such as James Whitcomb Riley as limited by their provincialism, their ear-

  nestness, and “ a clinging to past and conventional standards. ” . 1 Fiction, Chopin wrote,

  should instead represent

  “

  human existence in its subtle, complex, true meaning,

  stripped of the veil with which ethical and conventional standards have draped it. ”

  This refl ection provides a key to much of Chopin ’ s short fi ction, published in several

  periodicals and newspapers of her day as well as in two collections, Bayou Folk (1894)

  and A Night in Acadie (1897), particularly her recurrent depictions of women who

  deviate, in varying ways, from dominant ideologies of gender in their era. Chopin ’ s

  short stories, often set in the rich, multicultural contexts of the Creole and Acadian

  communities in Louisiana, invite analysis on many levels, including their location

  within the regionalist tradition and their engagement with racial and class issues.

  However, her canon is particularly notable for its exploration of how women who

  transgress conventions of female behavior, or at least recognize their restrictions,

  contend with the society that prescribes such mores. In so doing, Chopin ’ s fi ction

  engages repeatedly with the concept of the New Woman – a newly emancipated,

  progressive female ideal arising in the 1890s that challenged Victorian notions of the

  domestic, submissive True Woman. 2 What makes her short fi ction distinctive in its

  treatment of this fi gure is how her female characters ’ confl icts with society often arise

  from acknowledgment of their emotional and erotic needs, which Chopin portrayed

  in a light that was too candid for many readers. However, in keeping with her own

  dislike of didacticism, Chopin ’ s fi ction does not provide a prescriptive answer to the

  Woman Question. Instead, reserving judgment of her characters, Chopin depicts

  various modes of fulfi llment for women, both conventional and unconventional,

  throughout her stories.

  Such themes permeate Chopin

  ’

  s entire body of short fi ction, from her earliest

  writings to her fi nal stories. 3 In fact, her earliest creative piece, a fable from her

  Kate

  Chopin

  153

  commonplace book written sometime between 1867 and 1870, addresses the issue of

  self - defi nition, a theme which reverberated through her career to the infamous novel

  she published thirty years later, The Awakening . “ Emancipation. A Life Fable ” tells of

  a beautiful beast born in a cage; though he enjoys a placid life under the “ care of an

  invisible protecting hand ” ( Complete Works 37), one day he sees that the door of his

  cage stands open. After going repeatedly to the door, he leaps out: “ On he rushes, in

  his mad fl ight, heedless that he is wounding and tearing his sleek sides – seeing,

  smelling, touching of all things; even stopping to put his lips to the noxious pool.

  … So does he live, seeking, fi nding, joying, and suffering ” (37 – 8). While the creature

  in this fable is male, his experiences presage those of many of Chopin ’ s female pro-

  tagonists in later works; the “ awakening ” to wider opportunities, the departure from

  the metaphoric cage, and the willingness to suffer in pursuit of knowledge are impor-

  tant thematic elements in several of her stories. Moreover, Chopin ’ s use of cage sym-

  bolism in this tale anticipates a pervasive metaphor in late nineteenth

  -

  century

  literature of the New Woman: the bird that is either caged or allowed to soar free. 4

  Chopin ’ s two earliest published stories, “ Wiser Than a God ” (1889) and “ A Point

  at Issue! ” (1889), explore a recurrent topic of her short fi ction, marriage, in contrast-

  ing ways that underscore her varying treatments of that institution, especially its

  impact upon women. The fi rst story deals with the confl ict between marriage and a

  career for a New Woman, while the second explores the possibility of a marital model

  which provides a new “ space ” for its partners. In “ Wiser Than a God, ” Paula Von

  Stolz is a would - be virtuoso pianist who subsists by performing for
society parties.

  She falls in love with George Brainard, a wealthy young man, but when he proposes

  to her, she explains that she is not interested a society marriage, asking him, “ ‘ Is

  music anything more to you than the pleasing distraction of an idle moment? Can ’ t

  you feel that with me, it courses with the blood through my veins? ’ ” (46). In reject-

  ing the role of leisure - class wife in favor of a musical career, Paula anticipates another

  New Woman artist, opera singer Thea Kronborg in Willa Cather ’ s novel The Song of

  the Lark (1915). George convinces Paula to see him again, but he arrives at her home

  to learn that she has left for Germany to pursue her studies. Years later, newspapers

  report that the “ renowned pianist, Fr ä ulein Paula Von Stolz, is resting in Leipsic, after

  an extended and remunerative concert tour ” (47). With her is her former music pro-

  fessor, Max Kuntzler, who, also in love with Paula, followed her “ with the ever per-

  sistent will … that so often wins in the end ” (47). Indicating the constraints of

  leisure - class marriage for some women, Chopin ’ s story asserts that the only possible

  partner for her heroine is a man who respects her need to pursue an artistic career.

  In “ A Point at Issue! ” the kind of progressive union that Paula Von Stolz favors is

  portrayed through the marriage of Charles and Eleanor Faraday, but with conse-

  quences that instead suggest its limitations, at least for some. Eleanor has diverged

  from the typical lives of young women in Plymdale through her intellectual pursuits,

  and Charles, a professor of math at the local university, fi nds in her “ his ideal woman. ”

  Chopin ’ s narrator notes his pleased surprise that she is “ possessed of a clear intellect.

  … She was that rara avis , a logical woman – something which Faraday had not

  154

  Charlotte Rich

  encountered in his life before ” (49), invoking popular beliefs about the female mind

  that underlay criticism of the intellectual activities of the New Woman. 5 Indeed,

  many arguments against higher education for women arose in the late nineteenth

  century from assumptions of female intellectual inferiority and the fear that rigorous

  study would damage women ’ s reproductive capabilities. 6 Despite such cultural deter-

  rents, Charles and Eleanor vow to marry and to live according to a new “ companion-

  ate ” ideal, and they scandalize the community of Plymdale in agreeing that Eleanor

  should study French in Paris, where her husband will join her each summer.

  Meanwhile, Charles befriends two very different women who illustrate Chopin ’ s

  pattern of juxtaposing progressive and traditional female characters, as Per Seyersted

  has noted. 7 Margaret Beaton resembles the stereotypical New Woman of popular

  satire; she is “ slightly erratic, owing to a timid leaning in the direction of Woman ’ s

  Suffrage ” (52), and she wears garments that, “ while stamping their wearer with the

  distinction of a quasi - emancipation, defeated the ultimate purpose of their construc-

  tion by infl icting a personal discomfort that extended beyond the powers of long

  endurance ” (52 – 3). 8 Likening Margaret to bloomer - wearing feminists of the nine-

  teenth century, the narrator mocks her earnestness in contrast to her prettier sister

  Kitty, who “ [clamored] for no privileges doubtful of attainment and of remote and

  questionable benefi t ” (53) and who captures Charles ’ s attention.

  Eleanor unhappily suspects her husband of romantic distraction, and after Charles

  arrives in Paris, she suggests that they return to America, admitting to her jealousy:

  “ ‘ I have found that there are certain things which a woman can ’ t philosophize about,

  any more than she can about death when it touches that which is near to her ’ ” (58).

  Charles, pleased, kisses his wife as he thinks, “ ‘ I love her none the less for it, but my

  Nellie is only a woman, after all ’ ” (58). In contrast to the conclusion of “ Wiser Than

  a God, ” this text thus dismisses the possibility of a “ new ” kind of marriage emphasiz-

  ing individuality, and conventional assumptions about gender prevail, at least in the

  mind of Eleanor ’ s husband, for failing to articulate one ’ s feelings in a logical manner

  means being “ only a woman. ” However, Chopin does not satirize Eleanor ’ s inability

  to live in a companionate marriage; rather, this story depicts her as someone for whom

  that ideal does not lead to contentment. Indeed, “ A Point at Issue! ” expresses a theme

  throughout much of Chopin ’ s fi ction: that a woman ’ s own sense of what makes her

  happy is most important, whether it be as an independent artist or intellectual or as

  a housewife and mother.

  Another early story by Chopin contains the more radical implication that marriage

  is not for all women, an idea taken up in several New Woman novels. Her sole attempt

  at historical fi ction, “ The Maid of Saint Phillippe ” (1891), has received scant critical

  attention, perhaps because Chopin thought it an unsuccessful venture. 9 Set in the

  Missouri territory during the 1760s, the story tells of Marianne Laronce, a buckskin -

  clad, rifl e - toting young woman who is more content hunting in forests than at home

  caring for her aged father, and who in the course of the story responds to two marriage

  proposals. She fi rst refuses an offer to move to the new settlement of Saint Louis with

  fellow colonist Jacques Labrie, saying that she cannot force her father to leave the land

  Kate

  Chopin

  155

  where his wife lies buried. Soon after, a French soldier, Captain Vaudry, offers the

  young woman a luxurious life back in France “ ‘ [w]here you shall wear jewels and silks

  and walk upon soft and velvet carpets ’ ” (122). Marianne refuses, and when Vaudry

  presses his case, she responds:

  “ I will not look into your eyes … with your talk and your looks of love – of love! You

  have looked it before, and you have spoken it before till the strength would go from

  my limbs and leave me feeble as a little child. … Go away to your France and to your

  treacherous kings; they are not for me. ” (122)

  Though the story is set in the eighteenth century, Marianne ’ s response is signifi cant

  in its critical perspective on ideals of love and marriage in Chopin ’ s own era. In refus-

  ing to allow love to weaken her into a “ feeble ” infant or invalid, Marianne rejects a

  feminine response to love often portrayed in nineteenth - century sentimental fi ction.

  Instead, Chopin appropriates an archetype for male protagonists in American

  literature through the conclusion of the story; Marianne resolves to live among the

  Cherokees, declaring, “ ‘ Hardships may await me, but let it be death rather than

  bondage ’ ” (122). The bondage that she rejects is not only the incipient political

  oppression of the English in her region but also the constraints of marriage, and she

  literally turns away from potential husbands and patriarchal protectors:

  While Vaudry sat dumb with pain and motionless with astonishment; while Jacques

  was hoping for a message; while the good cur é was looking eagerly from his door - step

  for signs of the girl ’ s approach, Marianne had turned her
back upon all of them. With

  gun across her shoulder she walked up the gentle slope; her brave, strong face turned

  to the rising sun. (122 – 3)

  In portraying the response of the local priest as well as those of Marianne ’ s suitors in

  this scene, Chopin suggests how he is not only a surrogate father fi gure but also an

  emblem of Catholicism, a religion that Chopin often presented as constricting to

  women. 10

  Marianne thus turns from the constraints of her culture to the wilderness, though

  it contains the civilization of Native Americans whom both French and English set-

  tlers often saw as “ Other. ” She does so in the manner of Cooper ’ s Natty Bumppo and

  his literary descendants, such as Melville

  ’

  s Ishmael and Twain

  ’

  s Huck Finn, and

  Barbara Ewell calls this conclusion a “ narrative clich é ” (Ewell 81). However, Chopin ’ s

  conclusion hardly conforms to the pattern that Leslie Fiedler noted throughout Ameri-

  can literature in depicting a woman leaving society to enter the wilderness. Moreover,

  Marianne ’ s rejection of Vaudry and of her culture refl ects gender ideology in Chopin ’ s

  own era. In declining to let him adorn her with jewels and live under a “ treacherous ”

  patriarchy, she metaphorically eschews another institution: the economic dependence

  of women in middle - class marriage which Charlotte Perkins Gilman criticized in

  Women and Economics (1898) and which Chopin later explored in The Awakening . Even

  Chopin

  ’

  s Marianne, in a narrative set in the eighteenth century, recognizes the

  156

  Charlotte Rich

  problematic basis of the union that Vaudry describes, and as a questioning of nine-

  teenth - century notions of marriage, “ The Maid of Saint Phillippe ” is an early example

  of the theme to which Chopin would return more explicitly in her most famous text.

  Complementing these treatments of the institution of marriage, other stories from

  the earlier years of Chopin ’ s career explore the subject of divorce. Her interest in this

  topic extends from her fi rst novel, At Fault (1890), through two stories written in

  1893 to her English translation in 1894 of Guy de Maupassant ’ s story “ A Divorce

  Case. ” In that text, a lawyer defends his client ’ s desire to divorce her husband because

 

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