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== Life == [[File:Kate Chopin and children New Orleans 1877.jpg|right|thumb|Chopin and her children in New Orleans, 1877]] Chopin was born Katherine O'Flaherty in St. Louis, Missouri. Her father, Thomas O'Flaherty, was a successful businessman who had immigrated to the United States from [[Galway, Ireland]]. Her mother, Eliza Faris, was his second wife, and a well-connected member of the ethnic French community in St. Louis as the daughter of Athénaïse Charleville, a [[Louisiana Creole people|Louisiana creole]] of French Canadian descent. Some of Chopin's ancestors were among the early European (French) inhabitants of [[Dauphin Island, Alabama]].<ref name="litland"/> Kate was the third of five children, but her sisters died in infancy and her half-brothers (from her father's first marriage) died in their early 20s. They were raised [[Roman Catholic]] in the [[French Catholicism|French]] and [[Irish Catholicism|Irish traditions]]. She became an avid reader of fairy tales, poetry, religious allegories, and classic and contemporary novels. She graduated from Sacred Heart Convent in St. Louis in 1868.<ref name="litland">{{cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/LiterarySt.Louis|title=Literary St. Louis: Noted Authors and St. Louis Landmarks Associated With Them|author1=Associates of St. Louis University Libraries, Inc. |author2=Landmarks Associate of St. Louis, Inc.|year=1969}}</ref> At the age of five, she was sent to Sacred Heart Academy, where she learned how to handle her own money and make her own decisions. Upon her father's death, she was brought home to live with her grandmother and great-grandmother, comprising three generations of women who were widowed young and never remarried. For two years, she was tutored at home by her great-grandmother, Victoria (or Victoire) Charleville, who taught French, music, history, gossip, and the need to look on life without fear.<ref name=":02">{{cite book|title=The Cambridge Companion To Kate Chopin|url=https://archive.org/details/cambridgecompani00beer|url-access=limited|last=Beer|first=Janet|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2008|isbn=9781139001984|pages=[https://archive.org/details/cambridgecompani00beer/page/n25 13]–26}}</ref> After those two years, Kate went back to Sacred Heart Academy, which her best friend and neighbor, [[Kitty Garesche]], also attended, and where her mentor, Mary O'Meara, taught. A gifted writer of both verse and prose, O'Meara guided her student to write regularly, to judge herself critically, and to conduct herself valiantly. Nine days after Kate and Kitty's first communions in May 1861, [[St. Louis in the American Civil War|the American Civil War came to St. Louis]]. During the war, Kate's half-brother died of fever, and her great-grandmother died as well. After the war ended, Kitty and her family were banished from St. Louis for supporting the [[Confederate States of America|Confederacy]].<ref>{{cite book|title=Kate Chopin's Private Papers|last=Toth and Seyersted|first=Emily and Per|publisher=Indiana University Press|year=1998|isbn=978-0253331120|pages=1–2}}</ref> [[File:KateChopinHouse HABS2 cropped.jpg|right|thumb|[[Kate Chopin House (Cloutierville, Louisiana)|Chopin house in Cloutierville]]]] In St. Louis, Missouri on June 8, 1870,<ref>Marriage certificate between Oscar Chopin and Katie O'Flaherty accessed on ancestry.com on October 19, 2015</ref> she married Oscar Chopin and settled with him in his home town of New Orleans. The Chopins had six children between 1871 and 1879: in order of birth, Jean Baptiste, [[Oscar Chopin|Oscar Charles]], George Francis, Frederick, Felix Andrew, and Lélia (baptized Marie Laïza).<ref>{{cite web|title = Biography {{!}}|url = http://www.katechopin.org/biography/|website = www.katechopin.org|access-date = December 11, 2015}}</ref> In 1879, Oscar Chopin's cotton brokerage failed. The family left the city and moved to [[Cloutierville, Louisiana|Cloutierville]] in south [[Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana|Natchitoches Parish]] to manage several small [[Plantations in the American South|plantations]] and a general store. They became active in the community, where Chopin found, in the local creole culture, much material for her future writing. When Oscar Chopin died in 1882, he left Kate $42,000 in debt (approximately ${{Format price|{{Inflation|US|42000|1882}}}} in {{CURRENTYEAR}}{{Inflation/fn|US}}). The scholar [[Emily Toth]] noted that "for a while the widow Kate ran his [Oscar's] business and flirted outrageously with local men; (she even engaged in a relationship with a married farmer)."<ref name="toth">{{cite journal| author=Toth, Emily|title=Reviews the essay "The Shadows of the First Biographer: The Case of Kate Chopin"|journal=Southern Review|number=26 |year=1990}}</ref> Although Chopin worked to make her late husband's plantation and general store succeed, she sold her Louisiana business two years later.<ref name="toth"/><ref name="intro"/> Chopin's mother had implored her to move back to St. Louis, which she did, with her mother's financial support. Her children gradually settled into life in the bustling city, but Chopin's mother died the following year.<ref name="intro">{{cite journal| title=Short Story Criticism 'An Introduction to Kate Chopin 1851–1904'| journal=Short Story Criticism|volume=116 |year=2008}}</ref> Chopin struggled with [[Depression (mood)|depression]] after the successive loss of her husband, her business, and her mother. Chopin's obstetrician and family friend Dr. Frederick Kolbenheyer suggested that she start writing, believing that it could be therapeutic for her. He believed that writing could be a focus for her energy as well as a source of income.<ref>{{cite book|last=Seyersted|first=Per|title=Kate Chopin: A Critical Biography|location=Baton Rouge, LA|publisher=Louisiana State UP|year=1985|isbn=978-0-8071-0678-5|url=https://archive.org/details/katechopin00pers}}</ref> By the early 1890s, Chopin's short stories, articles, and translations appeared in periodicals, including the ''[[St. Louis Post-Dispatch]]'', and in various literary magazines. During a period of considerable publishing of folk tales, works in dialect, and other elements of Southern folk life, she was considered a regional writer who provided [[American literary regionalism|local color]]. Her literary qualities were largely overlooked.<ref name=kc/> In 1899, ''[[The Awakening (Chopin novel)|The Awakening]]'', her second novel, was published. While some newspaper critics reviewed the novel favorably,<ref>{{cite book|title = Kate Chopin|url = https://archive.org/details/katechopin00toth|url-access = registration|last = Toth|first = Emily|publisher = William Morrow & Company, Inc.|year = 1990|isbn = 9780688097073}}</ref> the critical reception was largely negative. The critics considered the behavior of the novel's characters, especially the women, as well as Chopin's general treatment of female sexuality, motherhood, and marital infidelity, to be in conflict with prevailing standards of moral conduct and therefore offensive.<ref>{{cite book|title = Kate Chopin: A Literary Life|url = https://archive.org/details/katechopinlitera0000walk|url-access = registration|last = Walker|first = Nancy|publisher = Palgrave Publishers|year = 2001}}</ref> This novel, her best-known work, is the story of a woman trapped within the confines of an oppressive society. Out of print for several decades, it was rediscovered in the 1970s, when there was a wave of new studies and appreciation of women's writings. The novel has been reprinted and now is widely available. It has been critically acclaimed for its writing quality and importance as an example of early [[feminist literature]] of the South.<ref name=kc>{{cite journal| author=O'Flaherty|title=Kate Chopin, An Introduction to (1851–1904)| journal=Twentieth-Century Literary Criticism|volume=14| year= 1984}}</ref> [[File:Kate Chopin's grave.jpg|right|thumb|Kate Chopin's grave in Calvary Cemetery, St. Louis, Missouri]]Critics suggest that such works as ''The Awakening'' were scandalous and therefore not socially embraced. Chopin was discouraged by the lack of acceptance, but she continued to write, primarily writing short stories.<ref name="kc" /> In 1900, she wrote "The Gentleman from New Orleans". That same year she was listed in the first edition of ''[[Marquis Who's Who]]''. However, she never earned a significant amount of money from her writing, instead living off of the investments she made locally in Louisiana and St. Louis of the inheritance from her mother's estate.<ref name="kc" /> While visiting the [[St. Louis World's Fair]] on August 20, 1904, Chopin suffered a [[brain hemorrhage]]. She died two days later, at the age of 54. She was interred in [[Calvary Cemetery (St. Louis)|Calvary Cemetery]] in St. Louis.<ref name="kc" />
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