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"The Yellow Wallpaper": Obsession Overcomes Oppression

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Obsession Overcomes Oppression

In the short story "The Yellow Wallpaper" by Charlotte Perkins Gillman, the reader is taken into the mind of a mentally disturbed woman named Jane who has been imprisoned by trying to fit the stereotypical wife mold of the nineteenth century. The reader is able to take opinions from Jane which reflect the stereotypes of frailty and the nurturing roles given to women. These opinions close all of the doors for the emotions taking place except those of Jane. By showing the story from her perspective, a bias of men is formed. Through Jane's perceptions of her surroundings, the reader is able to understand how men assign the roles of women and essentially, drive them to madness. In learning of Jane's …show more content…

As she stares at this wallpaper for hours, she thinks she sees a woman in the pattern of the paper. Jane states "I didn't realize for a long time what the thing was [...] behind [the] dim sub-pattern, but now I am quite sure it is a woman." When she decides that there is a women trapped in the wallpaper she becomes obsessed with what the women is doing. She says "I don't want to leave now until I have found it out." Perhaps in an attempt to save her own sanity, Jane stares endlessly at this pattern and creates what she perceives to be a woman because she has nothing else to fill her time. Jane determines that the image is a woman struggling to become free and she aligns herself with the woman. Jane mentions "I see her [...] creeping all around the garden [and] I don't blame her a bit. It must be very humiliating to be caught creeping [...] I always lock the door when I creep[...]. I can't do it [...], for I know [my husband] would suspect something at once." Jane sees her own self in the woman she created in the wallpaper. The fact that she says she must lock her door shows that she is afraid of her husband finding her out and putting a stop to what she feels is her only comfort. We also see in her visions of the woman in the wallpaper, the beginning of her slow decent into her own madness.

In keeping with her husband's rest cure, Jane continues to chase her obsessive fantasy project of helping the trapped woman get out of the wallpaper. Jane wants

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