Désirée s Baby

Désirée s Baby

MISSION 3 Identify the point of view used in the following selections. Prove your answers by writing parts of the story on the lines below. 1. Désirée's Baby 2. The Perfect Woman​

1. MISSION 3 Identify the point of view used in the following selections. Prove your answers by writing parts of the story on the lines below. 1. Désirée's Baby 2. The Perfect Woman​


Answer:

1. Désirée's Baby is written in third-person point of view.

An example from the story: "She had never thought of it before. She had never dreamed that her baby was not like the other babies. But now, as she looked at her child, she saw that it was not white. The child's skin was the same color as the yellow blanket."

2. The Perfect Woman is written in first-person point of view.

An example from the story: "I was the perfect woman. I had the perfect husband, the perfect home, and the perfect life. I was beautiful, successful, and happy. But then, something happened that changed everything."


2. Read the selection "Désirée's Baby” by Kate Chopin on the Internet and supply the basic elements of this story using the story grammar graphic organizer below.need ko na po now please ​


Answer:

Read the selection "Désirée's Baby” by Kate Chopin on the Internet and supply the basic elements of this story using the story grammar graphic organizer below.

Explanation:

Setting:

The story takes place in Louisiana before the American Civil War. It is one of the few stories Kate Chopin sets before the war. Before 1861

Characters:  

a. Madame Valmondé: A childless woman who adopts a baby abandoned at the gate of her husband's plantation in Louisiana.  

b. Désirée: A child found abandoned at the Valmondés' gate in the shadow of a stone pillar.

c. Armand: The rich heir to the Aubigny plantation and fortune.  

d. Baby: The child of Désirée and Armand. The child’s appearance, which reveals his black heritage, is the catalyst for the conflict in this story.

Conflict:

The conflict in "Désirée's Baby" is that Désirée and Armand's baby is "not white." Because of the racist views of the parents and their society at the time, this fact causes great conflict, to the point that Armand rejects Désirée and Désirée kills herself and their child.

Resolution:

In Kate Chopin's "Désirée's Baby," the resolution comes after Désirée and her baby leave the plantation. She disappeared among the reeds and willows that grew thick along the banks of the deep, sluggish bayou; and she did not come back again.

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3. Word Smart MISSION 3 Identify the point of view used in the following selections. Prove your answers by writing parts of the story on the lines below. 1. Désirée's Baby 2. The Perfect Woman​


one and two answer is on the comments


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