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Marginalization Of Women In The Yellow Wallpaper

Decent Essays

Sexists have always considered women as weak, but pre-women’s rights movement this was a general belief. Gilman depicts the marginalization of women, especially those claiming mental illness, in “The Yellow Wallpaper”. Through the treatment of the protagonist, the “woman” behind the wallpaper, and the “freedom” of the mentally afflicted, the outlook of the world on the female gender is observed. Gilman presents the reader with a mentally afflicted character who is viewed and treated as a perfectly stable child by all the men around her. Her husband tells everyone “that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression” when discussing his wife’s mental health (Gilman 762). This ignorance towards the protagonist’s …show more content…

The protagonist merges mentally with woman in the wallpaper, as is seen when she questions whether all the others will “come out of the wall-paper” as she did (773). This merging indicates that both the protagonist and the woman experience the same societal restrictions, which all women do during this time. However, the escape from the wall is not a full departure from all the standards society has set. She still thinks that she will “have to get back behind the pattern when it comes night” (773). This suggests that even though she feels free while she can roam the room, there is no true freedom for a mentally ill woman. The fact that her husband, a physician, fainted “right across [her] path by the wall” indicates that no one actually accepted the protagonist for her mental illness (773). Even a renowned physician like, her husband, did not expect odd behavior from his mentally afflicted wife, which seems to indicate that he did not actually understand her problem. Until understanding for the repressed is gained, freedom is impossible, as is seen during any revolutionary movement, like the civil rights movement. Gilman presents the idea that even though physical freedom is granted by this escape, societal freedom is not that easy to achieve. The short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper”, presents the social outlook and treatment of mentally ill women. Through marginalization, society constricts how much value women hold in the community and how much care they deserve. Using wallpapered women, Gilman suggests the restricted life of women, especially those suffering from mental illness, in her day and

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