"Fedora" is a short story written by Kate Chopin in 1895. The story was published under the title "The Falling in Love of Fedora" in The Criterion, a local St. Louis magazine, on February 20, 1897. The story centers on Fedora, a woman who becomes infatuated with Young Malthers and his sister, Miss Malthers.

"Fedora"
Short story by Kate Chopin
Text available at Wikisource
LanguageEnglish
Publication
PublisherThe Criterion
Publication dateFebruary 20, 1897

The story has garnered fairly little attention from Chopin scholars.[1] Analysis is generally split between straight and queer readings of the work.

Background

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"Fedora" was written in 1895, but the story was rejected from the Atlantic Monthly because they had considered the story too experimental.[1] The story was published in the St. Louis magazine The Criterion under the pen name "La Tour", although it is unknown why Chopin chose this pen name. The pseudonym was likely not intended to mask her identity, and she intended to include the story in her next story collection.[2]

Plot

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Fedora, a thirty-year-old spinster, finds younger men and women to be uninteresting. When she meets Young Malthers, however, she becomes infatuated with him, touching his hat and coat when nobody is watching. She chooses to take Miss Malthers, Young Malthers' sister, home from the train station. On the ride back from the train station, Fedora kisses Miss Malthers, shocking the latter.

Analysis

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Biographer Barbara C. Ewell and scholar Joyce Dyer both view "Fedora" as a classical tale of sexual repression.[3][4] Dyer characterizes Fedora as a "perverse, pathetic, desperate woman" who is only interested in Miss Malthers due to physical similarities with her brother, leading to Fedora kissing Miss Malthers as an "acceptable surrogate".[4]

Christina G. Bucher, writing in the Mississippi Quarterly, explicitly rejects Dyer's analysis. Bucher argues that the characterization of Fedora is consistent with that of a butch lesbian and that her passion for Young Malthers is actually Fedora momentarily submitting to heteronormativity.[5] Mariko Utsu, also writing in the Mississippi Quarterly, argues that the story could be interpreted as Fedora seeking to represent herself as a man, with her kissing of Miss Malthers following the "heteronormative script".[6]

References

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  1. ^ a b Koppelman, Susan (1994). Two Friends and Other Nineteenth-Century Lesbian Stories by American Women Writers. Penguin Group. pp. 176–177. ISBN 0452011191.
  2. ^ "Fedora". Story of the Week. February 3, 2017. Retrieved August 31, 2024.
  3. ^ Ewell, Barbara C. (1986). Kate Chopin. Ungar Publishing Company. p. 115. ISBN 9780804421904.
  4. ^ a b Petry, Alice Hall (1996). "The Restive Brute: The Symbolic Presentation Of Repression And Sublimation In Kate Chopin's "Fedora"". Critical essays on Kate Chopin. Digitized by Internet Archive. New York : G.K. Hall ; London : Prentice Hall International. pp. 134–138. ISBN 978-0-7838-0032-5.
  5. ^ Bucher, Christina G. (2003). "Perversely Reading Kate Chopin's "Fedora"". Mississippi Quarterly. 56 (3): 375–381. JSTOR 26476748 – via JSTOR.
  6. ^ Mariko, Utsu (2010). "Lesbian and Heterosexual Duality in Kate Chopin's "Lilacs"". Mississippi Quarterly. 63 (2): 303.