Chopin, Kate - Joyce Coyne Dyer (essay date summer 1984)

Joyce Coyne Dyer (essay date summer 1984)

SOURCE: Coyne Dyer, Joyce.“A Note on Kate Chopin's ‘The White Eagle.’” Arizona Quarterly 40, no. 2 (summer 1984): 189-92.

[In the following essay, Dyer analyzes the symbolism in Chopin's little-known late story “The White Eagle.”]

Few critics discuss Chopin's fiction written after April 1899—the publication date of The Awakening—with any degree of seriousness. Kenneth Eble writes that her last stories “lack distinction.”1 Per Seyersted regrets the “tame,” uncourageous nature of the bulk of her final manuscripts.2 And Robert Arner observes, “Only a few of her final tales are worth serious discussion.”3 Certainly one aspect of Chopin's fiction that suffers in her late stories is her imagery. Unlike the metaphors in The Awakening (as well as in several excellent stories) that enhance and often expand theme and meaning, those...

[The entire page is 1325 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: