What Is The Reflection Of The Yellow Wallpaper

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The Yellow Wallpaper is a story of a new mother struggling with postpartum depression. Family members, including her husband, believed she was suffering from a nervous condition. The author of the story The Yellow Wallpaper, Charlotte Perkins Gillman, was a woman’s activist who believed there was no difference between men and women mentalities. An example of this, Gilman was quoted as saying, “There is no female mind. The brain is not an organ of sex. Might as well speak of a female liver” (BrainyQuote). The story takes place during a time when women were oppressed. Gilman utilizes the narrator to describe the impact of her own suffering from a “mental illness.” This famous tale challenged the medical profession and traditional roles for men …show more content…

For example, “So I take phosphates or phosphites - whichever it is, and tonics, and journeys, and air, and exercise, and am absolutely forbidden to "work" until I am well again” (Gilman). The narrator disagrees with this treatment and expresses that “congenial work, with excitement and change, would do me good” (Gilman). This story is a reflection of the struggle Gilman endured after having her daughter. Following an often-cited passage from "Why I Wrote the Yellow Wall-Paper," Charlotte Perkins Gilman states she did not intend to drive readers "crazy" with "The Yellow Wall-Paper," but only to expose a serious and extreme lapse in medical judgment, or wisdom, regarding the "treatment of neurasthenia."” Dr. Silas Weir Mitchell prescribed the “rest cure” for Gilman to follow. This is a reflection of what the narrator’s husband prescribed. Most physicians were men during this time and had no knowledge of what caused Gilman’s suffering. In the article, “Bed Rest Wouldn’t Do For Pioneering Feminist,” it states that Dr. Mitchell debated “the woman question” and believed if women did other things outside of their domestic roles, it would …show more content…

In the story The Yellow Wallpaper, John speaks to his wife like she is a child. For example, “Then he took me in his arms and called me a blessed little goose, and said he would go down to the cellar, if I wished, and have it whitewashed into the bargain” (Gilman). As you can see, John calls his wife “blessed little goose,” denoting that she is in fact below him and comparing her to an animal. In the nineteenth century, it was taboo for a woman to do what she wanted and what she thought was best for herself. Gilman was always pushing her rights as a woman and fighting for a voice. She wrote this story to tell the world what it is like to be someone with no voice and how men and society have kept women from experiencing life outside their domestic roles. When the couple first gets to the colonial mansion, she is taken to the room that she will spend the rest of her time in and she disapproves. Her husband just laughs at her, shakes it off and moves on. She does not argue with him because she feels that she has no say and it would be a waste of time. The narrator also disagrees with her treatment but her opinion is disregarded by her husband because he is a physician. In the article, “The Writer as Doctor: New Models of Medical Discourse in Charlotte Perkins Gilman 's Later Fiction,” the writer expresses how the male

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