Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper

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“The Yellow Wallpaper” is a short story written by Charlotte Perkins Gilman that was first published in 1892. The story has been considered a breakthrough in the women’s feminist movement while it also began bringing awareness to mental illness surrounding postpartum depression and how the illness was treated. Gilman’s story outlines and compares its main character’s own struggles with the struggle for equal rights for women during the nineteenth century, in which women were typically viewed as being only useful for marriage and not having any true contribution to the home aside from bearing children. During a time where women essentially had no rights, women were often submissive to their husbands as they had no other choice.
The controlling and oppressive nature of …show more content…

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No matter how much the woman delves into her writings, it does not help in ridding herself of the surroundings of her unhappy life and ill feelings towards her dismissive husband. As the woman’s mental state continues to spiral downward, she becomes more reserved and passive in her rest treatment. The husband, unaware of his wife’s true feelings, begins to think that his rest remedy is working, further diluting his views on his wife’s health.
The wife spends a majority of her time in the nursery of the home, which has since become her own isolated prison cell. The fascination she discovers with the yellow wallpaper in the room begins her demise into insanity. Not only are there bars on the windows of the room she is in, but she begins to notice the bars within the wallpaper itself. The wallpaper slowly consumes her and takes control of her life. As the woman has descended into madness, she starts to notice a woman appear in the wallpaper, which can only confirm her insanity. “There are things in that paper which nobody knows but me, or ever will.” (Gilman, Pg.

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