Charlotte Gilman Feminism

1699 Words4 Pages

The goal of feminists, from centuries ago and of those of today, is to achieve and ensure equal political, economic, and social rights for women. Women have been able to cause huge reforms within societies through means of protest, diplomacy, and even literary works. One of the most influential and prominent feminists of the twentieth century that challenged social norms through her works was the novelist Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Growing up fatherless, Gilman struggled to have a proper education. But her early adversity and influences of upcoming feminists pushed her to write for social reform. In 1909 Gilman established The Forerunner, a magazine where she expressed her ideology of women's activism and problems they faced. She is known to …show more content…

One of her most popular and arguably best work she created was The Yellow Wallpaper. The work dwells in the inner mindset of an apparently mentally sick wife, and describes her descent into madness. But not only does the work provide with a chilling vibe, but with closer inspection, the work sheds light to the male superiority that had over their wives, and also the malpractice of treatment physicians used to help with depression with.
Throughout the entirety of the short story, the relations between men or women, or members of the same sex, displayed how prevalent men’s superiority over women was during the time period of the story's publication. The story is told through the diary entries of a woman who has been diagnosed with nervous depression by her husband, who is also a physician.Although she tells him that she thinks otherwise and instead feels that she is truly sick, her husband does not believe her and prescribes for her to take medication every hour, exercise, and to be forbidden to work until she is well again. Even though she believes that she can better herself through …show more content…

Through her work Gilman made noticed the treatment that not only she, but many other women as well, were being heavily pressured into doing in order to cure supposed depression or other mental illness. As shown in Gilman’s article in the October 1913 issue of The Forerunner, “Why I wrote The Yellow Wallpaper,” she tells of her encounter with depression and of a noted specialist in nervous diseases. Much like the female protagonist in her story, Gilman was told that there was not much wrong with her and was instructed to "have but two hours' intellectual life a day…. never to touch pen, brush, or pencil again" for as long as she lived. And much like the female protagonist of her story, Gilman obeyed her given instructions, and her condition worsened. Fortunately though, with the help of a friend, she tossed away the specialist’s directions and began to work again. She began to live her normal life, with all its fruits and adventures. After what seemed to be a miraculous recovery from her previous condition, she decided to pen down The Yellow Wallpaper. Due to her experiences, she made the role between male and female in the story like that of hers. This is why the husband was superior over his wife, and the wives health steadily

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