Yellow Madness Created in The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman

1031 Words3 Pages

Intriguing things such as madness, hallucinations, paranoia, and depression are all traits that make a story memorable and interesting. However, there is more than just madness contained in “The Yellow Wallpaper” by Charlotte Perkins Gilman. Through the use of an unnamed narrator, Gilman depicts how women of her time were trapped by social barriers. The innocent and seminally well to do opening of the story with a mentally “ill” women being cared for by her physician husband steadily digresses into a struggle for her to escape her bonds and gain her freedom, her social equality. The narrator is described as suffering from a “nervous depression--a slight hysterical tendency”. The treatment for such a condition in the 1890’s is complete and utter rest with no physical or mental excursion. The recommended cure is the words of narrator is to “….absolutely forbidden to "work" until I am well again”. She is to do nothing, not even pursue one of her favorite activities, that is to write. However, she does write but in secret. As described in this line from the story, “I did write for a while in spite of them; but it DOES exhaust me a good deal--having to be so sly about it, or else meet with heavy opposition”. While following a physician’s orders to cure an aliment is not unusual, the way her husband, her physician, disregards and talks down to her demonstrates the social structure between men and women and husbands and wives during this era. Men were seen as the breadwinners, the strong backbone of society, while women were seen as the weaker sex, mothers, wives, almost pseudo servants if not treated as actual servants. Women were to be house makers, mothers, to love and obey their husbands. Women possessed few rights and did not share... ... middle of paper ... ...ration women where having with these social boundaries along with the growing sentiment to break free of them. The narrator in the story essentially breaks free from these constraints. When she tears at the wallpaper freeing the trapped women and finds herself mimicking the trapped women’s actions. The narrator is skulking around the room searching for her own escape from her own yellow wallpapered prison. While the story does not tell what happens after the family leaves the house it does describe how the narrator reacts to her husband passing out, falling into her path as she is skulking around the room. She steps around or over him. This symbolizes what would eventually happen in society. Women would become free; they would receive equal rights and opportunities. They would figuratively and literally step over or around the men who had been holding them back.

Open Document