Armand does not confront her, but reverts to his cruel nature. This young woman marries Armand Aubigny, who had one of the richest and proudest names in Louisiana, and who at the beginning fell in love with Desiree in a way in which he did not care about her origins and gave her his important name. Her panicked insistence on her own whiteness reflects her real and dire social need to be accepted by her husband. Being black was seen as wrong, and Armand was not going to let that ruin his life. Like all Aubignys, young Armand fell in love dramatically. Désirée goes to him and grabs his arm, and asks him to look at their baby. This was until, the baby 's real complexion begins to set in at three months.
Armand and Desiree had a son, who was having black skin as he was growing; what in the time, was considered a disgrace for the entire family and most important in this case, to Armand. This eventually led him to abandon his wife and son, the author suggest that his hatred towards them is the hatred towards himself and his origins. This shows his racism. Armand believes that God has given him an unfair punishment in the form of his child and he turns his anger on his wife. And his slaves are Negrillon.
Armand has known Desiree since he is a boy. During the times of slavery and segregation in America, a person with any amount of African American heritage was seen as non-white, regardless of appearance. Armand Aubigny Armand Aubigny, Désirée's husband, coldly rejects his wife when she gives birth to a child who appears African American. Armand Aubigny Armand Aubigny may genuinely love Désirée so much he does not care about her mysterious parentage until their child shows signs of having mixed-race heritage , or he may know all about his own mixed-race heritage and choose to marry a foundling in order to have a scapegoat in case his child appears African American. This speaks to the theme of Love and Blindness in the story. Désirée retrieves her baby from Zandrine, and, without an explanation, she takes the child and walks outside. This is a lady who never had anything, has never had adoration like this, and was at that point deserted once.
After they had gotten married and they were expecting a baby, the day had come of the birth of the child Mrs. However, she does not do as Désirée asks and deny Armand's story that Désirée is "not white. This essay was written by a fellow student. At first, Desiree is portrayed as an ordinary person who is able to live a normal life. In the beginning, Armand seems like a decent man. This short story is about a woman named Desiree, abandoned at a very young age, who grew up to fall in love with Armand Aubigny.
She does not, for example, appear to have any influence over her husband's anger and violence against the slaves on their plantation. When her husband rejects her and her child, she walks into a bayou and apparently kills herself and her baby. He notices this letter, one written from his mother to his father. She is described as becoming ''the idol of Valmondé. Madame and Monsieur Valmondé Désirée's parents do not appear to care that Désirée might be biracial. The child, Désirée, grew up to be the pride and joy of the Valmondés.
Désirée immediately senses all that this accusation means and leaps to deny it. Wolff argues a simple trick would not evoke such strong reactions from readers. A nurse sits by the window. Madame Valmondé greets her daughter inside the house where Désirée and her baby are resting on a couch, dressed in muslins and lace. She tells her daughter to come back to the mother that loves her and to bring her baby. Armand who formerly loved Desiree is now turned into a fierce Armand. Monsieur Aubigny A supporting character He is the father of Armand and the previous owner of the plantation where Armand and Désirée live.
Later, the nicest thing we learn about him is that he stops beating his slaves after the birth of Desiree's baby, presumably because he is so pleased to be a father. It is October and the slaves are harvesting cotton in the fields. They begin to notice that he is acquiring the traits of an African American and soon the couple start to narrow down the possibilities of the situation. From the very beginning of the story, I knew that this would be something that I would enjoy. Her hair is exposed and gleams in the sun.
If you are experiencing suicidal thoughts, please reach out for help: What is ''Désirée's Baby'' About? He no longer looks directly at Désirée and he goes out of his way to avoid her. Désirée confronts Armand with the letter because she hopes that he will tell her to stay and show as much love and support as her mother has shown. Without having Armand in Desiree's life, she had low self-esteem and did not have the will to live anymore. It was as if he no longer loved her and did not care at all about the departure of both his wife and son. A few months after her son is born, Armand's demeanor changes, and Désirée is confused. He buys the best material goods for his wife and child, but that may be more by way of showing off his status rather than from true generosity.
In the beginning of the story, Desiree has a passionate love story with her husband. These observations reveal the dark nature of the place through its dark appearance. Her silence is may be guided by shame about the truth or a desire to protect her daughter in her innocence. I can say that Armand is a racist, because he has strict rules to his slaves. When people would look at the house, they saw that it was Gender Roles In Desiree's Baby By Kate Chopin Desiree is a lady who completely relied on her husband for any type of support. Eventually Armand does acknowledge the truth after he finds a note written from his mother to his father and he has to live with that burden the rest of his life, just as Desiree does, thinking that her blood is tainted and that it was her Theme Of Irony In Desiree's Baby 1210 Words 5 Pages They end up having a kid but the boy turns out to be not white.
She points out how much he has grown, and that even his fingernails needed cutting that morning. Stereotypes make everything different and difficult for a lot. His sudden and dramatic passion for Désirée reveals his expectation that he will get what he wants, as he always has. So, the first conflict, we can identify, is Desiree's unknown identity. Eighteen years later, she was standing near the same stone pillar where she was found when Armand Aubigny rode by and fell in love with her at first sight. Plantations were the major source of income in the southern states and thus the vehicle of luxury for families like Aubignys.