Women's Oppression in 'The Yellow Wallpaper'

1075 Words3 Pages

The Yellow Wallpaper: Freedom of Oppression or Oppression to Freedom
Being a woman is that of progress, strength and ingenuity; or so it is now, here in the present. However, long before now, there were certain standards for how a woman should act. One might say that a woman was a sort of accessory to the patriarchal status of a man. Through that oppression, women were hindered from becoming individuals; a human being capable of so much more than just smiling pleasantly, remaining quiet with child in arm, barely breathing through the tightness of a corset and being careful not to appear as anything other than mindless and obedient to such a standard. In ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ by Charlotte Perkins Gilman, a woman who may or may not be named …show more content…

The outside pattern I mean, and the woman behind it is as plain as can be.” (Gilman, 533). Setting and metaphors tend to extend the vision of a short story into a vivid sense of place and time for the reader; as well as allude to a specific ideal. In this story, setting and metaphors play a large role in formulating the bond between ‘Jane’ and her husband, ‘John’ by her examination of the intricacies of the yellow wallpaper. While John tries to suppress Jane’s desire to be an individual in order to maintain patriarchal control, it actually fuels her desire even more internally, to be a person; someone free to express individuality and intelligence. It is clear that Jane feels some sort of conflict about her “nervousness,” by which she expresses through metaphors within her setting—the setting, being the yellow wallpaper. Although John tries to sound loving and caring, his words are met with ill intention, of which Jane notes, and only drives her writing into an abyss of images pertaining to being captive and breaking free. All of this symbolizes the idea that underneath the dynamics created within the oppression of woman and the progression of man, the desire of individuality still remains present. Similar to the desire of a bird to fly free from its’ cage, Janes’ imagination creates a reflective symbolic transcription of the yellow wallpaper, which gives her stimulation she is being denied and of breaking free—at least in

Open Document