“The Yellow Wallpaper” depicts a woman struggling with an illness and is put in a room to be cured. However, the woman does not feel comfortable in the room and must face people superior to her who give her no other choice than to back down and do what is told. With women being inferior, she tries to improve her health but the irony of the story say otherwise.
The time period of the Yellow Wallpaper, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is presumably set in the 19th century, women during this time were expected to be weak, passive, and irrational. This being said, most males were particularly controlling, especially over women as men tended to treat women inferiorly (Sichok). Women during this time were expected to “stay at home to look after the
…show more content…
The main theme, oppression, in the story is evident when Jane is imprisoned in an unhealthy environment and cannot leave as she wishes because John insists she stay in her room as a rest cure for her illness. Jane does what she is told believing in her husband, a doctor, even though she feels uncomfortable in the room. Women in this time who had an illness were “disempowered… once locked …show more content…
Her mind frees itself by submitting into the delusions her mind is under. At night, Jane is engrossed by the wallpaper design mentions a cage-like pattern within the wallpaper with a women trapped behind bars, shaking the pattern as if trying to escape. The women behind the “cage” is a symbolic of women being trapped behind the “bars” of a male-centric society without a voice. This is clear considering John over rides her wishes of moving rooms and informs the reader that he is not “very careful and loving” as Jane says (Delbanco, 365). John tends to treat Jane as another one of his patients more often than helping her be cured as his wife. Hints in the story allow the reader to interpret the situation around the characters in a different
The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman can by read in many different ways. Some think of it as a tragic horror story while others may find it to be a tale of a woman trying to find her identity in a male-dominated society. The story is based on an episode in Gilman's life when she suffered from a nervous disease called melancholia. A male specialist advised her to "live a domestic a life as far as possible.. and never to touch a pen, brush or pencil..." (Gilman, 669). She lived by these guidelines for three months until she came close to suffering from a nervous breakdown. Gilman then decided to continue writing, despite the physicians advice, and overcame her illness.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s story, “The Yellow Wallpaper” is as a wonderful example of the gothic horror genre. It was not until the rediscovery of the story in the early 1970’s that “The Yellow Wallpaper” was recognized as a feminist indictment of a male dominated society. The story contains many typical gothic trappings, but beneath the conventional façade hides a tale of repression and freedom told in intricate symbolism as seen through the eyes of a mad narrator.
“The Yellow Wallpaper” is a symbolic tale of one woman’s struggle to break free from her mental prison. Charlotte Perkins Gilman shows the reader how quickly insanity takes hold when a person is taken out of context and completely isolated from the rest of the world. The narrator is a depressed woman who cannot handle being alone and retreats into her own delusions as opposed to accepting her reality. This mental prison is a symbol for the actual repression of women’s rights in society and we see the consequences when a woman tries to free herself from this social slavery.
and "gates that lock". At the top of the stairs is a gate that keeps
The story "The Yellow Wallpaper," by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, is a story about control. In the late 1800's, women were looked upon as having no effect on society other than bearing children and keeping house. It was difficult for women to express themselves in a world dominated by males. The men held the jobs, the men held the knowledge, the men held the key to the lock known as society - or so they thought. The narrator in "The Wallpaper" is under this kind of control from her husband, John. Although most readers believe this story is about a woman who goes insane, it is actually about a woman’s quest for control of her life.
The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is a fictionalized autobiographical account that illustrates the emotional and intellectual deterioration of the female narrator who is also a wife and mother. The woman, who seemingly is suffering from post-partum depression, searches for some sort of peace in her male dominated world. She is given a “rest cure” from her husband/neurologist doctor that requires strict bed rest and an imposed reprieve form any mental stimulation. As a result of her husband’s controlling edicts, the woman develops an obsessive attachment to the intricate details of the wallpaper on her bedroom wall. The woman’s increasingly intense obsession with
In the short story The Yellow Wallpaper, the author Charlotte Perkins Gilman, portrays the main character as a victim of oppression. Oppression is defined as being heavily burdened mentally or physically by troubles or adverse conditions. John’s wife along with other women during the 1800’s, were subject to the stricter laws of society. The narrator, known as the main character, was applied with less rights and privileges. An example on how the narrator was subjected to oppression is the husband, the wallpaper, and the mansion.
"The Yellow Wallpaper" is about a creative woman whose talents are suppressed by her dominant husband. His efforts to oppress her in order to keep her within society's norms of what a wife is supposed to act like, only lead to her mental destruction. He is more concerned with societal norms than the mental health of his wife. In trying to become independent and overcome her own suppressed thoughts, and her husbands false diagnosis of her; she loses her sanity. One way the story illustrates his dominance is by the way he, a well-know and
The Story “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman is a great expression of women’s oppression in the 19th century. The story introduces readers to a woman frustrating in her life and suffering from a nervous depression and her marriage as the yellow wallpaper is causing her a real insanity. Having a background about the timing and the setting that the story is written in helps the reader to internalize the whole meaning of the story and understand its important details. The story is told by a narrator using an anxious tone, and she is being angry and sarcastic at the same time. The woman mentions that her husband has taken her to a summer vacation. So, the story takes
Women are often described as they are less than men. In the 19th century women were dominated by men and treated unequal, this made them feel lonely and isolated. Seeing that the 19th century society is different from today, because women were not permitted to work, they could not vote and even worst they could not have a word in anything. The short story "The Yellow Wallpaper” and also the narrator represent the impact of abuse of women in society. The narrator of the “Yellow Wallpaper” suffers from depression and her husband John is a physician. John as her husband and physician makes all decisions for her; this really bothers her, “but the narrator admits: if a physician of high standing,
Also, we can relate the woman in the wallpaper to the narrator because she is free to do what she wants because John is not there, but during the night she is locked up in her room much like the woman in the wallpaper. These circumstances in which the narrator was put under during the late 1800's would not have been an oddity, and therefore I believe many women just as the narrator did would have had problems go undiagnosed.
alone, and forbidden to leave the room, she is oppressed by her own thoughts and unreal
First of all the genre of this story is irony. According to Frye 's "theory of myths" this genre contains certain characteristics like, the story displays a real world seen through a tragic lens, the protagonist is defeated, and suffers. These characteristics, along with others, can be seen throughout the text. The story consists of a female protagonist, and is seen as inferior in kind to men and her environment. During this time period, women would be considered inferior to men, which we can see within the narrator and John’s marriage. Also, on page 77, the narrator describes the room with the yellow wallpaper and it is in poor condition. It seems as though she is describing that of an
The mood of the story shifted from nervous, anxious, hesitant even, to tense and secretive, and shifts again to paranoid and determination. Her anxiousness is evident whenever she talks to John. She always seems to think for lengthy time when attempting to express her concerns about her condition to him. The mood shift from anxious to secretive is clear when she writes “I had no intention of telling him it was BECAUSE of the wall-paper.” (9). She wants no one to figure out the affect the wallpaper has on her and she wants to be the only one to figure out its pattern. The final mood shift to determination is obvious when she writes “But I am here, and no person must touch this paper but me – not ALIVE!” (11). She is steadfast in attempting to free the woman from the wallpaper. She even goes as far as to lock herself in the room to make sure that she is not interrupted. The major conflicts of this story are the narrator versus John over the nature of her illness and its treatment and the narrator’s internal struggle to express herself and claim independence. During the entire story her and John’s views about her treatment conflict with each other, especially when it comes to her writing. He even makes her stay in the room upstairs instead of in a prettier room downstairs that she would prefer. She often keeps her views to herself or writes them down in
From a feminist standpoint, the insistence of the narrator’s husband deeming it mandatory that she stay in the nursery whilst under the constraints of her mental prison gives the impression that she is the embodiment of the circumstances that women were challenged with in regards to their freedom of thought. The introspective journal entries written by the protagonist make it clear that her husband finds her “fancies” ridiculous and that he upheld the ideology that he certainly does not believe she should be writing or diagnosing herself. He does not believe she is capable of understanding herself or that she has the intuition to know what is