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The Yellow Wallpaper, By Charlotte Perkins Gilman

Decent Essays

“Approximately 1 in 5 adults in the U.S. – 43.8 million, or 18.5% - experiences mental illness in a given year” (“Mental Health…”). In the eighteenth century, mental illness was seen as mad and demonic. People were ignorant of the sickness of the mind and often mistreated people who had seemed mental, with the lack of research and resources for it. Isolation became an essential tool to those who needed to be cured. During this time, depression and lack of self-expression, more commonly with women, was regular. In the short story of “The Yellow Wallpaper”, by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the narrator goes through psychological stages and environmental issues. Psychological matters determine the truth and underlying meaning that lies between the narrator and the wall. In Gilman’s time, treatment of mental illness played a large role, as well as the effects of isolation, and the suppression of female intelligence.
In the nineteenth century, treatment of mental illness in Gilman’s time was often mistreated. At the time, people feared others who appeared to have mental illness. Fear of mental illnesses began with the industrial age, as people who were diagnosed seemed as a threat to public safety. After the Civil War, there was no trust in treatment. Moral treatment was the most popular and efficient cure. Although, the curability rate was declined due to the high prices of facilities, government funds, and false trust in individuals who had guaranteed to be specialists yet had

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