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Summary Of Kelly Sundberg's 'It Will Look Like A Sunset'

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Paul Newman once said, “People stay married because they want to, not because the doors are locked” (74). There is no such thing as the perfect relationship, however, being involved in a healthy relationship is essential for a person to feel valued, safe, and happy. Unfortunately, in the situation of Kelly Sundberg’s personal essay “It Will Look Like a Sunset,” and Kate Chopin’s short story “The Story of An Hour,” include extreme examples of unhealthy relationships. The essay “It Will Look Like a Sunset,” shares painful experiences of Sundberg’s physical and emotional abusive relationship with her husband Caleb, while “The Story of an Hour,” shares a rare reaction of a married woman, Louise Mallard, who explores her emotions cautiously when hearing about the death of her husband. Each woman faces their own prison created by their husbands. The two marriages represent the figurative meaning of doors being locked in a marriage. Both pieces of literature convey the theme of confinement by using the literary devices of foreshadowing, imagery, and conflict. Foreshadowing is a literary tool that is found in both articles to express the theme of confinement. Sundberg chooses to end the introduction with an unusual experience with wildlife. The introduction has a description of an incident when “a hummingbird flew through the open door of the apartment to the window in the corner and beat at the glass” (Sundberg 1). The hummingbird foreshadows the entrapment and panic of how

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