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Oppression In The Yellow Wallpaper

Decent Essays

“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

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