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Differences Between Virginia Woolf And A Room Of One's Own And The Yellow Wallpaper

Decent Essays

Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own” and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” explore a woman’s access to personal and physical space. Woolf stresses the importance of seclusion, while Gilman challenges the confinements of enforced isolation. The rooms in both stories represent women’s lack of autonomy and emotional and economic freedom.
Thematically Woolf and Gilman speak to the infantilizing of women. Both of these authors use physical space as a metaphor for the ways that women were controlled and confined within the female domain. Men’s control and dominance are maintained by restricting the feminine space, literally, as examined in Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own”, and figuratively, as described in Charlotte …show more content…

Metaphorically, the room in “The Yellow Wallpaper” is a prison. The patterns of the paper appear as bars to Jane, mirroring the actual bars on the windows, and eventually reveal a woman trapped behind them. Consciously, or perhaps subconsciously, Jane identifies herself as one of the imaginary women, realizing that she is a fellow prisoner. John, acting as a parent, placing Jane in a room that was formerly a nursery, symbolizes her childlike place in her marriage, and society at large. The room in Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own” represents a space for women to be individually creative, a room that is free of gender disparities, and domestic servility. The room symbolizes privacy, leisure time, and financial independence. The societal expectations of women demand that they pull the second shift, “…they are washing up the dishes and putting the children to bed” (Woolf 243). Woolf is adamant that women require a room of their own as the constant noise of society is distracting women from their passions and in many cases, these women die without the opportunity to write a word. Yet Woolf believes that the creativity, though unexpressed in written form, lives on, “…they need only the opportunity to walk among us in the flesh” (Woolf 243). Although Woolf is realistic about the financial restraints on a woman and frustrated by the limitations due gender

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