Perhaps the most insistent indicator of the movement
from local color to well-made story is the stories of Kate Chopin, who was more
influenced by Maupassant's tightly unified stories than by the southern local
colorists. After reading Maupassant,
Chopin wrote, "Here was life, not fiction; for where were the plots, the
old-fashioned mechanism and stage trappings that in a vague, ununthinking way I
had fancied were essential to the art of story making." Claiming that Maupassant escaped authority
and tradition and spoke in a direct and simple way, Chopin says, "I like
to cherish the delusion that he has spoken to no one else do directly, so
intimately as he does to me."
Of the over forty stories published in Bayou Folk
1894) and Night in Acadie (1897), some of the best-known are relatively
simple formal stories that are very close to the anecdotal stories or O.
Henry. For example, "Madame
Celestin's Divorce" is a simple story on the Maupassant mode about lawyer
Paxton who advises Madame to divorce her drinking, wife-beating husband. The lawyer thinks he will then marry
her. He falls into the habit of dreaming
of taking a wife. But she meets him on
the street and tells him that her husband is home and has promised to turn over
a new leaf. "La Belle Zoraide" is touching story about a servant who
falls in love, but her mistress does not want to lose her. When the servant has a child, the mistress
sends it away and tells her it is dead.
Servant pines away, caring for a bundle of rags. When the mistress brings the baby to her, she
will have nothing to do with it and lives to be an old woman with her bundle of
rags.
"Athenaise" is more thematically complex,
about a woman who marries and then regrets it and goes home. Does not hate husband. "It's jus' being married that I detes'
an' despise. I hate being Mrs Cazeau,
an' would wan to be Athenaise Miche again.
I can't stan' to live with a man; to have him always there; his coats
an' pantaloons hanging in my room; his ugly bare feet--washing them in my tub,
befo' my very eyes, ugh!" She goes
back to him when she knows she is pregnant.
Also, more powerful and complex is "The Storm, about Bobinot and
Calixta, and Alcee who comes and has sex with Calixta while Bobinot is in town
and there is a storm. "When he touched her breasts they gave themselves up
in quivering ecstasy, inviting his lips.
Her mouth was a fountain of delight.
And when he possessed her, they seemed to swoon together at the very
borderland of life's mystery." At the end everyone is happy. "So the storm passed and every one was
happy." Both her husband and his
wife are content not knowing.
Chopin's best-known and most successful story is
"Desiree's Baby," for in it the formal structure of the story and its
Maupassant-like reverse ending is made more complex by the importance of the
social issue on which it depends. This
was Chopin's most successful story during her lifetime and remains her most
famous story, receiving renewed attention since the advent of feminist
criticism. However, many recent critics
feel they must apologize for or justify the story's trick ending, for it
suggests Chopin's most important literary forefather, Guy de Maupassant. Emily Toth claims that Chopin goes beyond the
Maupassant convention; Peggy Skaggs says that the ending is more complex and
more revelatory of Chopin's view of life than it may at first seem; and Cynthia
Griffin Wolff is only willing to compare Chopin's vision to Maupassant's
by claiming that both focus on the
"inescapable fact that even our most vital moments must be experienced on
the boundary--always threatening to slip away from us into something else, into
some dark, undefined contingency."
The story begins with the introduction of Désirée
with a baby, which motivates a return to the past and the reader's introduction
to Désirée herself as a baby and thus the central mystery of her origin. There is really no reason for Désirée to be a
foundling in this story except to provide the mystery of her parentage and thus
to throw a shadow over her own child's ancestry. The motif of "shadow" introduces
the story's most significant pattern.
Désirée is not only found in the "shadow" of a big stone
pillar, but eighteen years later while lying asleep in that same shadow--as if
she has never moved--she is seen by Armand (the prince in this abortive fairy
tale) who falls in love with her, "as if struck by a pistol shot."
The importance of paternal names is introduced very
early, for Armand does not care that Désirée is nameless (The name her foster
mother has given her suggests that simply she was desired), for this means he
can all the more easily impose his own family name--one of the oldest and
proudest in Mississippi--on her when they marry. And indeed Désirée says Armand is
particularly proud that the child is a boy who will bear his name. Armand's home shows little of the softness of
a woman, suggesting instead the strictness of a male monastic life, with the
roof coming down steep and black like a cowl and with big solemn oaks whose
branches shadow the house like a pall.
The "shadow" metaphor is further emphasized by Désirée's
growing suspicion that there is some air of mystery about the house and by her
efforts to "penetrate the threatening mist" about her.
Like "Cask of Amontillado," "The Cop
and the Anthem," and "Tennessee's Partner," Chopin's story is
structured to illustrate a point or lay bare a hidden truth, rather than to
"realistically" present events motivated by "as-if" real
characters. "Désirée's Baby"
may seem more important or serious than the stories of Poe, O. Henry, and Harte
because of its socially significant themes of racism and sexism, but its
narrative structure may be no more complex.
Still, you might want students to compare these stories in terms of
their ironic patterning and the relative complexity of their themes.
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