The ideals of music are related to the fact that music awakens a person's inner feelings and awakens human enlightenment.Edna aesthetic value allows her to express her inner feeling while being imprison to society.(PG9) “ She felt moved to read the book in secret and solitude …show more content…
Throughout the novel protagonist, Edna Pontellier seems to awaken from the society in which she tries to "escape" , where all her responsibilities lie. Edna’s social expression is compared to as a parrot; in which they have a unique language that cannot be comprehended by others. Edna’s life nobody understands Edna' internal perspective emotions. The cage the parrot is in represents Edna way of life, in which each bar of …show more content…
The cage traps edna’s feelings, and freedom is limited. (Pg 47) "I would give up the unessential; I would give money, I would give my life for my children; but I wouldn't give myself, represents the idea of Edna acknowledging that no one can control her, in which she is aware of the role of a woman. Her denial to give up herself reflects the idea that she feels the right to be free and shall not be deprived by her family. (Pg8) 'They were women who idolized their children, worshiped their husbands and essential it a holy privilege to efface themselves as individuals and grow wings as ministering angels", woman during this time period are tied down with responsibilities and duties where they must fulfill in which freedom is erased. Society builds two separate worlds for an individual. In the novel Edna evolves from two distinctive societies, Grand Isle, and New Orleans, Grand is where responsibilities and duties are faded away where her inner soul awakens ,while New Orleans outburst her external soul to act more as an 1880s woman and being deprived of from her rights. Grand isle is where her new life lies upon, in which she is more of an independent woman and where her awakening had given the freedom she wants. The doors between these societies reflect that idea that when one door closes, another opens’. The idea of having the expression of a perfect family forces Edna to act in such manner for the sake of her society,(pg7) Mrs. Pontellier was forced to admit that