19th Century Feminism: Insights from 'The Yellow Wall-paper'

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Charlotte Gilman’s “The Yellow Wall-paper”
In January of 1892, author Charlotte Perkins Gilman published her short story, “The Yellow Wall-paper” in The New England Magazine. Gilman’s work illustrates the public perception of woman’s health in the 19th century and is considered to be an important part of early American feminist literature. During the 19th century women were confined to the idea of the “ideal” woman and the “domestic sphere.” According to Barbara Welter, in her 1966 paper entitled “The Cult of True Womanhood: 1820-1860,” an ideal woman embodied piety, domesticity, pureness and submissive. Women would find true happiness in taking care of their families and living a simple and uncomplicated life. “The Yellow Wall-paper” follows the mental deterioration of the female narrator, who recently gave birth. She has been advised to relax, eat healthy and exercise so her health will improve. Gilman’s “The Yellow Wall-paper” exposed the danger the antiquated belief had on women in the 19th century. Gilman’s use of the yellow wallpaper illustrates a
The narrator describes it as a smell that clings to not only her but the whole house. She describes the smell as the color yellow, which makes her think of “all the yellow things [she] ever saw – not beautiful ones like buttercups, but old foul, bad yellow thing” (98). The narrator can no longer associate the color yellow with anything pretty or good as she now only sees “foul” and “bad” things in the yellow wallpaper. The continued decline of the wallpaper through the story mirrors the narrator’s deteriorating mental health. In the beginning the wallpaper, while annoying, was not hideous. Now as the narrator descends into madness the wallpaper is becomes dirtier, smellier and is missing in

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