illustrated portrait of American author Kate Chopin

Kate Chopin

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Kate Chopin's portrayal of the Southern region in "Odalie Misses Mass."

Summary:

In "Odalie Misses Mass," Kate Chopin portrays the Southern region with a focus on its cultural traditions, societal norms, and religious practices. Through vivid descriptions and character interactions, Chopin captures the essence of Southern life, highlighting both its charm and its complexities.

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In "Odalie Misses Mass," by Kate Chopin, is the author's depiction of the Southern region sentimental, ironic, or muckraking?

Given the three choices, I would argue that Kate Chopin is being sentimental about the Southern region in this story.

Now, we'll examine the reasons why. First, Chopin excelled in short fiction in the tradition of Guy de Maupassant. She focused on character rather than plot, and her works were imbued with the kind of psychological realism that shocked the readers of her time. Additionally, her seemingly amoral stance on social issues and innovative distillation of the Southern female experience characterized many of her stories. Odalie Misses Mass represents one such story in her radical pantheon of works. 

In the story, Odalie misses church in order to sit with Aunt Pinky, a senile, elderly black woman. The young Odalie is only thirteen years old. Like many girls her age, she revels in dressing up and looking her best on special days. Yet, despite her desire to show off her finery at church, Odalie decides to keep Aunt Pinky company when she realizes that everyone else has deserted her old friend. 

Now, in many respects, Odalie is the typical Southern young lady. Her locus of influence encompasses the domestic sphere, and her character represents all that is revered in Southern femininity. In the story, Odalie speaks in the Creole dialect of her region, and her sincerity is both endearing as well as disarming. Despite charges of racism, Chopin didn't try to hide what Odalie and Aunt Pinky would have sounded like in real life. When Aunt Pinky reminisces about vaguely unsettling experiences from the past, Odalie takes on the mantle of a fictitious personality. She becomes "Paulette," someone "who seemed to have held her place in old Pinky's heart and imagination through all the years of her suffering life."

Odalie's behavior is typical of many of Chopin's heroines, who often sacrifice their own comfort for the happiness of others. In Chopin's South, the completely feminine woman is faithful and self-sacrificing. Odalie's attitudes contrast with that of Edna Pontellier, Chopin's revolutionary heroine from The Great Awakening. Through Edna, Chopin highlights the dilemma of a woman torn between her sensual nature and her domestic role. Chopin's Edna was a radical departure from the traditional Southern heroine. While The Great Awakening gave us an unflinchingly honest insight into the feminine psyche, Odalie Misses Mass firmly remains within the realms of Southern conventionality.

Odalie's relationship with Aunt Pinky is a sentimental portrayal of Southern unity. In the story, Chopin highlights a unique fellowship untarnished by generational conflict and feminine friction. She also explores the possibility of camaraderie between the races. Odalie Misses Mass may be sentimental in nature, but it is also radical in its implications.

Sources:

1) The Southern Woman in the Fiction of Kate Chopin by Marie Fletcher, Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, Vol. 7, No. 2 (Spring, 1966), pp. 117-132.

2) Unveiling Kate Chopin by Emily Toth.

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What does Kate Chopin illustrate about the South through muckraking in "Odalie Misses Mass"?

Muckraking is considered investigative writing meant to expose social ills or corporate and political corruption. In her short story "Odalie Misses Mass," Kate Chopin exposes some of the social ills of slavery.

When Odalie stops at the cabin of Aunt Pinky, she finds the old slave, "the helpless, shrivelled old negress," alone. Disturbed that Aunt Pinky is alone, Odalie learns that a young slave named Pug has left her to go to church. So, Odalie calls to her waiting mother that she is going to stay with Aunt Pinky and cannot continue on with her to church.

When she resumes her seat, Aunt Pinky repeats "done gone" a few times, suggesting that she is left alone frequently. Then, Aunt Pinky recalls when Odalie's grandfather said he would have to sell Pinky and others because he had hit hard times, but he did not sell Pinky after witnessing how fond Odalie was of her and when Odalie insisted that she did not want fancy things if it meant selling Aunt Pinky. Aunt Pinky also recalls to Odalie the time that she caught her crying because Pinky wanted to marry Hiram, a servant of a certain Mr. Benitou.

Because Odalie went home and cried and broke dishes 

"...an' pesters yo' gran'pap 'tell he bleedge to buy Hi'um f'om de Benitous."

Odalie's grandfather again softens and gives in to his granddaughter, and Pinky gets to marry Hiram. The contrast between the treatment and consideration for his granddaughter and that given his slave exposes the cruelty and disregard for human feelings that slave owners exhibited frequently in the South.

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