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Charlotte Perkins Gilman's 'The Yellow Wallpaper': An Analysis

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The setting and narrative of Charlotte Perkin Gilman's story “The Yellow Wallpaper” is crucial to the reader's understanding of one women's plight from depression to her descent into complete and total madness. A mixed account of Gilman's personal life and fiction in efforts to better the mental institution as a whole. It takes place in the late 1800s where women were already submissive and oppressed by men, this coupled with the Narrator's throes of depression only made it worse for her. “John laughs at me, of course, but one expects that in marriage”(Gilman 226). Societal roles such as being the wife make her feel as though she is a second-rate citizen and not someone with dignified emotions. In “The Yellow Wallpaper”, Charlotte Perkins Gillman depicts the inconsistencies and the contradiction of the resting cure using the elements of a secluded mansion, a dominating alpha male, and most importantly the wallpaper itself. All of which turns the narrator into a passive victim of circumstances. Due to the metaphoric lethal cocktail that she takes, containing the lack of knowledge and the stigmatization of depression led to her undoing. Additionally, the story being that it is in the first person point of view is very significant to the audience. The fact of the matter is the narration is unreliable to due to the fact of her insanity. But her narrative sheds insight on the inner workings of the inefficient treatment of depression. The treatment is the resting cure by Dr.

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