An Answer To Madness in The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

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An Answer To Madness

In the short story, “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the protagonist starts out pondering the beautiful sight of a mansion and wonders how she and her husband were able to afford it. As the short story progresses, the narrator is forced to be isolated, because of her mental condition, in a room that used to be a nursery . Her husband, a physician, believes that the treatment for her “depression” is very little activity and no writing. The narrator manages to keep a secret journal. In time, she is bothered by the yellow wallpaper in the room. She concludes that it looks like a woman trapped in a cage and realizes that her own sense of feeling is trapped by her husband. An analysis of “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman through the biographical, feminist, historical, and psychoanalytic lenses suggests that the text is really about the negative impact on women’s mental capacity forced by men during the 19th century.
Through a biographical lens, Gilman models the narrator’s husband after her own father. Gilman, born on July 3, 1860, was a prominent feminist, novelist, and writer. When she was only a child, her father, Frederick Beecher Perkins, abandoned his wife, Mary Perkins. Gilman’s father left them with a scarce amount of money. Therefore, Gilman was forced to ask family members for help. Looking at the author’s history through a biographical lens, it is very similar to the short story “The Yellow Wallpaper” because the narrator’s husband tends to abandon his wife while going to “work” constantly or running “errands.” From the short story, “John is away all day, and even some nights when his cases are serious.” (Gilman) the narrator shows that her husband isn’t home very of...

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...man’s mental capacity. Up to present day, I believe men are still expecting things from women that may have been true socially many years ago, however they have to realize that that type of thinking is becoming archaic and that women's roles in a community have been changing and still are. I believe that cultural traditions may be the culprits for allowing men to think that they have more power over women. From myriad sources, I have witnessed that women try so hard to live up to a man’s expectations. Men, constantly expecting only the best from women, can really affect a woman’s mentality, thinking they have to be perfectionists. However it is extremely hard to be exceptionally perfect. Most importantly, never having components of happiness in one’s life because of a controlling man can lead to bleakness and low self-esteem resulting in a possible mental condition.

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